Developer(s) | Qualcomm |
---|---|
Stable release |
Eudora OSE 1.0 (requires Rosetta on Mac OS X), 7.1 (Windows Paid/Sponsored/Light version)
6.2.4 (Mac OS X Paid/Sponsored/Light version) 6.1.1 (Mac OS 9 version) 1.0 (OSE) / 2004-05-18 (Mac OS 9) 2006-10-11 (Paid/Sponsored/Light version for Windows/Mac OS X) 2010-09-13 (OSE) |
Operating system | Windows, Classic Mac OS, Mac OS X, Linux |
Type | |
License |
Free software (Eudora OSE); earlier: Adware, payware, Light |
Website |
Eudora /juːˈdɔərə/ is an email client that was used on the classic Mac OS, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows operating systems but is no longer under development. It also supported several palmtop computing platforms, including Newton and the Palm OS.
Eudora was developed in 1988 by Steve Dorner, who worked at the Computer Services Organization of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The software was named after American author Eudora Welty, because of her short story "Why I Live at the P.O."; Dorner rearranged the title to form the slogan "Bringing the P.O. to Where You Live" for his software. 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.
Eudora was acquired by Qualcomm in 1991. Originally distributed free of charge, Eudora was 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 2006 Qualcomm stopped development of the commercial version, and 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.