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12.22.09

How Do I Open Saved Email In Thunderbird?

By Dave Taylor

I've set Thunderbird as my default email program and set Apple Mail program preferences to use Thunderbird as the default program.

But here's the thing. When I open saved emails from my hard drive the Mail program opens them and says it's the default. But Thunderbird receives all emails and sends them?

Dave's Answer:

You are suffering from "default application to use" problems. The issue is that Mac OS X, like Windows and just about every other operating system, uses a table of associations to bind a particular file type with a program that can handle it.

For example, double click on a .JPG file and it'll open a different program than a .HTML file or .PPT file will launch. Envision something that's as simple as PPT=PowerPoint, JPG=Preview, HTML=Safari, and so on.

In addition, there's a similar table in your Web browser that associates certain types of links with specific applications or helper plugins or Safari itself. For example, click on a PDF and it might launch the Adobe Acrobat helper app that actually works within Safari (or Firefox, etc), while a different configuration might have Apple's Preview viewer launch as a separate external application.

What you've done when you set your default email program to be Thunderbird is to establish that mapping within your Web browser (for the most part) and for links that start with "mailto:", either explicitly or implicitly. Try it: mailto:help@apple.com.

The problem is, you haven't changed the file binding or mapping. When you save an email message, I'm guessing it has a '.eml' filename suffix and a specific icon that shows up in the Finder and on your Desktop. Am I right?


I use Apple Mail but also have Microsoft Entourage installed on my own computer, so when I drag a message from Apple Mail onto the desktop, here's what I see:

mac email msg file icon

If I drag a message from Entourage, I see the same basic micro-preview icon, but the filename has a '.eml' suffix associated with it.

Either way, the important thing is to see what application is tied to the individual file. You can do this by selecting the file then choosing File --> Get Info... or just pressing Cmd-I. Either way, you'll get to here:

mac finder file more info

Continue reading this article.


About the Author:
Dave Taylor has been involved with the Internet since 1980 and is internationally known as an expert on both business and technology issues. Holder of an MSEd and MBA, author of twenty books and founder of four startups, he also runs a strategic marketing company and consults with firms seeking the best approach to working with weblogs and social networks. Dave is an award-winning speaker and frequent guest on radio and podcast programs. AskDaveTaylor.com http://www.intuitive.com/blog/
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