You love Thunderbird. Your company uses Office365.
Owl is the little bird that lets the two talk to each other.
Once you’re logged in, Owl hides in the trees and lets you work. Your emails appear just like any other emails in Thunderbird. Pure productivity.
You don’t even see Owl. That’s how he likes it. n64 roms internet archive
Read your work emails in Thunderbird
Send emails to your colleages
Open, save, and send attachments
Browse your Office365 address book in Thunderbird. Modify it. The beauty of the Internet Archive’s collection is
“My company moved last week to a multi-factor authentication (MFA), without any possibility to use “app-passwords”. So we were stuck…
Your solution with Owl is easy to configure.”
“I just wanted to send you a “big thanks” for “Owl for Office365”. It is finally solving a big problem with an Office365 server.
Finally, this add-on cures a big pain point I had for over a year now!”
The beauty of the Internet Archive’s collection is best used as a or a preservation lookup . Find a weird Japanese import? Test it there. Want to see if Indiana Jones and the Infernal Machine was actually that bad? Go for it.
For those who don't speak emulation-ese, a ROM (Read-Only Memory) is a digital clone of a game cartridge. The Internet Archive hosts thousands of them. You can, at this very moment, legally (we’ll get to that) stream Banjo-Kazooie in your browser like a YouTube video.
Most modern web browsers support the emulation, but you may need to use a specific browser or configure your browser settings to ensure compatibility.
But if you fall in love with Paper Mario all over again? Buy the digital re-release on the Switch. Support the official rereleases when they exist. Use the Archive as the museum it wants to be, not the free store it could be.