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Eudora (email client)

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Eudora
Developer(s)Team HERMES

Historically:

UIUC; Qualcomm
Stable release
8.0 alpha 28e (Windows); 6.2.4 (Mac OS X); 6.1.1 (Mac OS 9) / 2004-05-18 (Mac OS 9); 2006-10-11 (Windows/Mac OS X)
Preview release
8.0 alpha 28e (Windows)
Operating systemWindows, Linux

Historically:

Classic Mac OS, Mac OS X, Linux[1]
TypeEmail (IMAP and SMTP client)
LicenseBSD License;
earlier: Free software (Eudora OSE), Adware, payware, Light
Websitewww.igg.me/at/hermes80/ (Eudoramail 8.0) www.computerhistory.org/_static/atchm/the-eudora-email-client-source-code/ (preserved Eudora 7.1)

Eudora (/jˈdɔːrə/) is a family of email clients that was used on the classic Mac OS, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows operating systems. It also supported several palmtop computing platforms, including Newton and the Palm OS.

The final Macintosh and Windows versions of Eudora, released in 2006, were succeeded by the Qualcomm-backed, cross-platform Eudora OSE (q.v.), built on an unrelated codebase (viz. that of Mozilla Thunderbird) with additional extensions. The first and last version of Eudora OSE was released in 2010 to negative reviews and lukewarm support; development subsequently ceased due to a lack of funding.

The last 'mainline' (pre-OSE) versions of Eudora for Mac and Windows were open-sourced and preserved as an artefact by the Computer History Museum[2] in 2018; as part of the preservation, the CHM assumed ownership of the Eudora trademark.

The actively maintained version of the software, known as Eudoramail as of June 2024, originates from 'mainline' Eudora for Windows as preserved by the CHM. Hermes, its current maintainers, describe Eudoramail 8.0 as currently being in alpha; Wellington typographer Jack Yan, meanwhile, points out its stability, notwithstanding a number of well-characterised and reproducible display bugs.[3]

History[edit]

Pre-Qualcomm (1988-1991)[edit]

Eudora was developed in 1988 by Steve Dorner, who worked at the Computer Services Organization of the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.[4] The software was named after American author Eudora Welty, because of her short story "Why I Live at the P.O.";[5][6] Dorner rearranged the title to form the slogan "Bringing the P.O. to Where You Live" for his software.[7] Although he regretted naming it after the still-living author because he thought doing so was "presumptuous", Welty was reportedly "pleased and amused" by Dorner's tribute.[7] This original, UIUC incarnation of Eudora was compatible with Classic Mac OS only[8].

The Qualcomm years and the first Windows version (1991-2006)[edit]

Eudora was acquired by Qualcomm in 1991. Qualcomm produced a visually and functionally similar analogue, though the resemblance was merely superficial. Until the birth-cum-death of Eudora OSE, the Mac and Windows programs were developed by different teams at Qualcomm, in different programming languages (C and C++), and had different milestones.[2]

The software was originally distributed free of charge; in response to management pressure[8], Eudora was later commercialized and offered as a Light (freeware) and Pro (commercial) product. Between 2003 and 2006 the full-featured Pro version was also available as a "Sponsored mode" (adware) distribution.

In 1995, in response to the rise of webmail services, Qualcomm licensed the Eudora trademark to WhoWhere? (later acquired by Lycos); this service operated until 2006, when the eudoramail.com domain ceased accepting new accounts and existing accounts were reintegrated into Lycos Mail. In 2006, Qualcomm also ceased development of the 'mainline' version of Eudora for Windows (in all its forms: adware, freeware, and commercial).

Hiatus and source code release (2006-2018)[edit]

Rather than devote continued resources to the development of a loss leader product,[9][10] Qualcomm instead sponsored the creation of a new open-source version based on Mozilla Thunderbird, code-named Penelope, later renamed to Eudora OSE. Development of the open-source version stopped in 2010 and was officially deprecated in 2013, with users advised to switch to the current version of Thunderbird.

On May 22, 2018, after five years of discussion with Qualcomm, the Computer History Museum acquired full ownership of the source code, the Eudora trademarks, copyrights, and domain names. The transfer agreement from Qualcomm also allowed the Computer History Museum to publish the source code under the BSD open source license. The Eudora source code distributed by the Computer History Museum is the same except for the addition of the new license, sanitization of "bad words" found mostly in comment sections of the code, and the removal of third-party software that neither the museum nor Qualcomm had the right to distribute.[2]

Under Hermes[edit]

Pre-production (2018-2022)[edit]

In August 2018, a "small team" started working on patching the lacunae in the Eudora code, in order to render it usable on modern systems. According to the initial posting on the eudora-win[Note 1] mailing list, the intent was to decouple entirely from Stingray Desktop, a proprietary library designed for constructing graphical user interfaces under Windows. Originally, Stingray Desktop was known as Objective Toolkit and was developed by Stingray Software (which was acquired on March 3, 1998 by Rogue Wave[11]); as of 2024, it is produced by Perforce[12]. The rationale was that this would allow the mail client (named simply "Hermes Mail" at the time) to be fully open source.

Likewise, Eudora for Windows 7.1.0.9 (the final version released by Qualcomm) leveraged Microsoft Trident as its browser engine (i.e. HTML renderer), a software component deprecated by Microsoft in favour of EdgeHTML as of 2018; the latter would be superseded in turn by Blink. Replacing Trident was part of the project's strategy at the outset and, as of June 2024, remains so (see "Features", infra).

During the time it had been under Qualcomm management, Eudora for Windows had never implemented support for character encoding, and had instead been hardcoded to declare every e-mail message sent as encoded iso-8859-1 (irrespective of the actual content) and to display every incoming message using the system encoding (one of the Windows encodings, depending on the language version of the system). Even before 2006, this created problems for users corresponding in languages other than Western European ones; later on, as UTF-8 became more and more popular, it became a problem for everyone without exception.

Finally, Eudora 7.1.0.9 and earlier predated the Heartbleed vulnerability and thus refused to negotiate securely using Transport Layer Security with servers that implemented the security patch; they also did not include a modern root certificate store. Therefore, some users had resorted to tunnelling with stunnel as a workaround[13][14] while others simply trusted the offending certificates manually[15].

It was determined that the three former problems had to be remedied in the executable code of the mail client itself, but that the latter could be patched by replacing two dynamic-link libraries and the root-certificate store. Accordingly, pre-production of the mail client (which underwent a rebrand, first from "Hermes Mail" to the project codename "Aurora", and subsequently to "Eudoramail") involved the release of the so-called "HERMES SSL Extensions", also under an open source licence.

Production and pre-release (2022-)[edit]

Features[edit]

Eudora 6.0.1 added support for Bayesian filtering of spam with a feature called SpamWatch. Eudora 6.2 added a scam watch feature that flags suspicious links within emails in an attempt to thwart phishing. Eudora 7.0 added ultra-fast search, which finds any emails using single or multiple criteria in seconds.

Eudora has support for "stationery", a standard message or reply prepared ahead of time to a common question. Eudora stores emails in a modified mbox format (*.mbx), which uses plain text files instead of a database as Microsoft Outlook does. This allows the user to back up portions of their email correspondence without backing up the entire database.

Eudora supports the POP3, IMAP and SMTP protocols. Eudora also has support for SSL and, in Windows, S/MIME authentication, allowing users to sign or encrypt email communications for greatest security.

Eudora is noteworthy for its extensive variety of settings to customize its behavior, many of which are not available in the user interface but are accessed using x-eudora-setting URIs that must be pasted into a message and clicked.[16]

Third-Party Plugins[edit]

At least two third-party plugins exist that can convert characters that also exist in iso-8859-1, and it's also possible to run it with "Mime-proxy", but depending on a specific user's needs and due in part to the internal limitations of Eudora they may only offer a partial solution.[17][18]

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ This mailing list, run by the Clio ListMoms Cartel, is the de facto peer support forum for all versions of Eudora for Windows and Eudoramail. It is subscribed to by sending a blank e-mail to the address join-eudora-win@hades.listmoms.net with the word "Gazelle" in the subject line.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Eudora Releases". mozilla.org. Archived from the original on September 6, 2015. Retrieved September 28, 2015.
  2. ^ a b c "The Eudora Email Client Source Code". www.computerhistory.org. May 22, 2018. Archived from the original on May 22, 2018. Retrieved May 22, 2018.
  3. ^ Yan, Jack (April 6, 2024). "Eudora users, welcome Aurora: finally, a modern, secure, Unicode-friendly successor". Archived from the original on June 17, 2024. Retrieved June 17, 2024.
  4. ^ "[appletalk] Re: PopMail+GatorBox+MacTCP". comp.archives. July 3, 1990. Archived from the original on March 8, 2013. Retrieved July 28, 2016. USENET posting with Steve Dorner's announcement of Eudora.
  5. ^ "Eudora Welty: Why I Live at the P.O." art-bin.com. Archived from the original on July 18, 2011. Retrieved September 28, 2015.
  6. ^ Eudora Background Documents (Internet Archive copy)
  7. ^ a b Thomas, Jo (January 21, 1997). "For Inventor of Eudora, Great Fame, No Fortune". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 9, 2016. Retrieved September 28, 2015.
  8. ^ a b Dr R. Yeap (February 27, 2021). Eudora Interview with Steve, John and Jeff. Archived from the original on June 17, 2024. Retrieved June 16, 2024 – via YouTube.
  9. ^ Dr R. Yeap (February 27, 2021). Eudora Interview with Steve, John and Jeff. Archived from the original on June 17, 2024. Retrieved June 26, 2024 – via YouTube.
  10. ^ "Eudora History: Email for a Different Era". Tedium: The Dull Side of the Internet. September 28, 2017. Archived from the original on April 30, 2024. Retrieved June 26, 2024.
  11. ^ "ROGUE WAVE COMPLETES STINGRAY ACQUISITION FOR $21M - Tech Monitor". March 3, 1998. Archived from the original on June 24, 2024. Retrieved June 24, 2024.
  12. ^ "GUI Development Tools For Windows | Stingray Studio | Perforce". www.perforce.com. Archived from the original on May 16, 2024. Retrieved June 24, 2024.
  13. ^ "Eudora 7.1: why do I have this strange problem with Certificate?". groups.google.com. Retrieved June 24, 2024.
  14. ^ "HERMES Mail / Discussion / General Discussion: To those having TLS/SSL issues...try Stunnel". sourceforge.net. Retrieved June 24, 2024.
  15. ^ "Eudora and SSL Certificate Failures | Lomcevak". blog.timeoff.org. Archived from the original on May 3, 2016. Retrieved June 24, 2024.
  16. ^ X-Eudora-Settings URIs (Internet Archive copy)
  17. ^ "UTF8ISO for Eudora - English documentation". windharp.de. Archived from the original on September 28, 2015. Retrieved September 28, 2015.
  18. ^ "Greek Message Viewer". www.drivehq.com. Retrieved October 2, 2015.

External links[edit]