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The Bat, by RITLabs, comes with a semi-separate program called Smart Bat which has calendar, schedule and notepad functions. Smart Bat opens in a separate window. The Bat has mailbox searching and a park facility which prevents important messages from being moved or deleted.
Other features include mailbox searching, message threading and filtering and spell checker. PGP encryption is supported. Advanced macro creation allows functions such as mail-merging and auto-response to be developed by the user. PGP is supported and the user can specify exactly what type of mail attachments are to be blocked.
A wide range of address book formats can be imported into the Bat. The help file is actually helpful and easy to use.
Editions exist for the Windows operating system only. Requires 23MB of disk space.
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What about Opera; another free browser with a built-in email client. I mean, if you are going to give top honors to a free client, then you should look at the other free client also. This review justified itself largely based on the failing security of outlook, but if that's your main concern, don't get thunderbird no matter what. I mean, come on, IT'S OPEN SOURCE. It doesn't get any less secure than that. It doesn't have the market presense of outlook, but if it ever does look out -- there will then be incentive to use it as the vehicle for viruses, and it will be childs play since it's open source.
Opera, with it's email client, is free, not open source, and actually attempts some things that are revolutionary. I don't think that it would win your shoot-out, since it tries to be different and takes a lot of getting used to. I don't even think that I like it the best of the ones that I try, but I respect it for what it is trying to do and the fact that it is much more secure than outlook.
Just my 2 cents; I'm tired of hearing about Mozilla/Thunderbird when I have seen time and again that it is an inferior product to my current favorite.