I don't see an option related to GLODA in edit->prefs->advanced->general, is it the same as "Enable Global Search and Indexer"? Thanks Squall On Fri, Aug 10, 2012 at 9:57 AM, mike cloaked <mike.cloaked@gmail.com>wrote:
On 08/10/2012 12:41 AM, gt wrote:
Why don't you guys try something like claws or sylpheed, if you are having problem with thunderbird. I have used claws a couple of times and I can say that it consumes minimal resources (for a graphical client).
Unless lots has changed recently, Claws is not really a great replacement for TB. In large part due to lack of html compose support (e.g. font control and tables can be pretty darn important for some). Evolution might be,
it used to crash a lot - perhaps it has improved recently and is worth trying again.
I use a local imap server for local storage - even on my laptop - so I can change email clients with zero dependence on any clients local storage quirks.
I am running TB 17 - one thing worth checking is to ensure GLODA is turned off (edit->prefs->advanced->general). This has caused terrible cpu and io activity for me in the past.
On my laptop, while roaming, if i lose connections - then sometimes TB re-checks and indexes things - which causes CPU spikes for a bit - but
On Fri, Aug 10, 2012 at 2:35 PM, Genes MailLists <lists@sapience.com> wrote: tho they
go away.
Gene, your comment above about GLODA is an important one and one which quite a few people seem not to be aware of - when TB first moved to GLODA it was automatically switched on when updating TB from the previous version - and caused me lots of CPU spikes at the time, and indeed when it was re-indexing long periods of huge CPU usage - at that time (way back from the current time) I switched off GLODA permanently, and all the CPU usage issues went away - and I have never had any problems since - and have never switched GLODA back on!
It might be an idea to try switching off GLODA and see if the CPU high usage issues remain or not - if they go away then the likely culprit was GLODA.
-- mike c
-- Yesterday is history. Tomorrow is a mystery. Today is a gift. That's why its called the present. Headmaster Squall :: The Wired/Section-9 Close the world txen eht nepo $3R14L 3XP3R1M3NT$ #L41N http://twitter.com/headmastersqual