I am a heavy e-mail user (aren’t we all) and depend on a solid IMAP client to get the job done. For the past 2 years or so I’ve been a Thunderbird guy. The Mozilla folks recently released Thunderbird 2.0, and I have been spending some time doing reconfiguration.
One task I needed to complete was re-arrange the order under which accounts appear in the folders. Here’s how to accomplish this:
Find your prefs.js file in your profile folder (C:\Documents and Settings\<Windows login/user name>\Application Data\Thunderbird\Profiles\<Profile name>\ for XP users)
Locate the mail.accountmanager.accounts property and modify it accordingly. Each account is represented by a string (eg. account2, account 3, etc). Simply re-order the strings to update the order in which they will appear
As most Canuck fans know, there was almost a very rare event early in the 3rd period of the Canucks’ Game 5 tilt vs Dallas. The Stars’ Louie Eriksson attempted to pass the puck to Mike Modano at the point during a delayed penalty call against the Canucks. What resulted was a bad pass which went past Modano, banked off the boards and slid all the way down the ice, just *grazing* the post, almost resulting in a Canuck goal. Amazing stuff.
According to a USA Today blog post, the Canucks are expected to introduce new uniforms (blue, green and white) on Aug 1. Apparently this has been common knowledge for some time now, but I just read this today. Further research found this from the Vancouver Sun (Feb 24/2007)
“Right now we’re ordering next year’s inventory blindly,” says the owner of a sporting goods outlet in North Vancouver. “All we’ve been told is that the colours of the uniforms will be blue, green and white, but we don’t know what the crest is going to look like. The current killer whale [or orca] jersey, as we understand it, will be kept in reserve and occasionally be used as a ‘classic’ uniform.”
Al MacInnis scored a power play goal in the first period to draw first blood:
The first period ended with the home team being down 1-0.
At 1:45 of the second period, Vancouver’s Doug Smith drew a holding penalty on a somewhat questionable call. The Canucks Brian Bozek and Rich Sutter flew down the ice on a shorthanded 2 on 1 and came very close to tying the game. The Canucks were dominating play, despite being shorthanded.
Then veteran Harold Snespts retrieved the puck behind Kirk McLean and passed it up the left hand side of the ice to a streaking Trevor Linden. Trevor split the defense and scored an amazing goal that thrusted the Coliseum Fans into a frenzy: