9 Ways To Make Thunderbird Load Your Email Faster
This may sound like a lot, especially considering that those accounts have thousands of messages stored on the server, but Thunderbird is actually very good at this. What it isn’t very good at is managing the huge folders that accumulate on the local side of the equation – the folders on your PC.
The first way to improve performance is by automatically compacting folders.
For these next few settings, we’ll be playing in?Tools -> Options. ?To turn on auto-compact and set the size, you’ll need to click on the?Advanced?tab, and then click on the?Network & Disk Space?tab under that.
As you can see, I have Thunderbird set up to only compact folders if it will save me over 20MB of space. This is actually a good thing – I could even set it lower to enable more frequent compacting. This will keep your folder sizes down and performance high. The only problem is that this automatic compacting, especially when you have multiple accounts set up, can interfere with your normal use of the client, especially when the client first loads.
To fix this, click on the?Config Editor, and in the “Filter” field, type in “mail.purge.ask“.
Set this value equal to?true. Now, Thunderbird will still automatically compact folders, but if you’re in the middle of trying to read or respond to new email messages, it won’t interfere with your efforts. This was the biggest annoyance for me, and this one setting made a world of difference.
To further increase performance, in the windows that I showed you above, you might also consider making the following changes as well.
The following settings can be found under the?Tools -> Account?settings. Each email account you’ve set up has a section with various menu items. Why did I end up with such huge folders that needed compacting? Because up until recently Thunderbird didn’t delete files that you deleted.
Strange, I know. But now, under “Server Settings“, you can have Thunderbird empty the trash when you close the client.
Under “Copies & Folder“, enable the archiving of your messages. This won’t directly improve performance, but it’ll let you delete messages off your server without worrying about those messages getting lost.
Choose to save to?Archives?under each account folder, and then click?Archive Options?to choose how you’d like to sort those archived messages.
Now, you can click on the “Disk Space” menu item and set up Thunderbird to delete all messages that are older than a year (365 days).
If you’re brave, you could delete messages sooner, but in my case I figure that if I haven’t dealt with the message after a year, I never will. You’ve also enabled local archiving, so you’ve got your local copies safe and sound.
The final setting that can help your Thunderbird performance is only fetching message headers, rather than the entire message itself.
This one change alone can reduce your initial Thunderbird start-up time tremendously.
So, did any or all of these tweaks make an impact for you? Sometimes it can be tempting to dump an application when it starts bogging down like Thunderbird can, but when you start digging you’ll quickly realize that it’s simply a configuration issue.
Let us know how tweaking your Thunderbird settings as described above helped you improve its performance. Do you have any other tips? Share your thoughts in the comments section below.
?
?
?