Technology Tales

Notes drawn from experiences in consumer and enterprise technology

TOPIC: MOZILLA THUNDERBIRD

Blocking thin scrollbar styles in Thunderbird on Linux Mint

23rd February 2026

When you get a long email, you need to see your reading progress as you work your way through it. Then, the last thing that you need is to have someone specifying narrow scrollbars in the message HTML like this:

<html style="scrollbar-width: thin;">

This is what I with an email newsletter on AI Governance sent to me via Substack. Thankfully, that behaviour can be disabled in Thunderbird. While my experience was on Linux Mint, the same fix may work elsewhere. The first step is to navigate the menus to where you can alter the settings: "Hamburger Menu" > Settings > Scroll to the bottom > Click on the Config Editor button.

In the screen that opens, enter layout.css.scrollbar-width-thin.disabled in the search and press the return key. Should you get an entry (and I did), click on the arrows button to the right to change the default value of False to True. Should your search be fruitless, right click anywhere to get a context menu where you can click on New and then Boolean to create an entry for layout.css.scrollbar-width-thin.disabled, which you then set to True. Whichever way you have accomplished the task, restarting Thunderbird ensures that the setting applies.

If the default scrollbar thickness in Thunderbird is not to your liking, returning to the Config Editor will address that. Here, you need to search for or create widget.non-native-theme.scrollbar.size.override. Since this takes a numeric value, pick the appropriate type if you are creating a new entry. Since that was not needed in my case, I pressed the edit button, chose a larger number and clicked on the tick mark button to confirm it. The effect was seen straight and all was how I wanted it.

In the off chance that the above does not work for you, there is one more thing that you can try, and this is specific to Linux. It sends you to the command line, where you issue this command:

gsettings get org.gnome.desktop.interface overlay-scrolling

Should that return a value of true, follow the with this command to change the setting to false:

gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface overlay-scrolling false

After that, you need to log off and back on again for the update to take effect. Since I had no recourse to that, it may be the same for you too.

A different Firefox…

17th November 2007

On Ubuntu, I made a move to using Ubuntuzilla's deployment of Firefox. Because Firefox's Gecko engine is used by other parts of Ubuntu, any Firefox updates issued by Mozilla don't come through straight away. The idea of using Ubuntuzilla is that you get Mozilla's latest, be it Firefox, Thunderbird or Seamonkey, without having an impact on the rest of the Linux installation; while Ubuntu's Firefox is left in place, you are now presented with the vanilla Firefox for all your web surfing needs. Visually, there's not much change but for the built-in Firefox application fonts coming through in the new instance, a strange sight when you see Ubuntu's more subtle alternatives everywhere else. I tried the new tack to see if picked up RealPlayer in place of Xine, but that sadly has not been the case. Nevertheless, I now have 2.0.0.9 and the latest improvements this side of version 3.

Moving Emails from Outlook to Evolution

3rd November 2007

It seems a little strange to my eyes, but Evolution cannot import Outlook PST files. On one level, I see a certain amount of sense: after all, Outlook is a Windows application and Evolution remains resolutely on the Linux side of the divide. Nevertheless, it is still a pesky nuisance.

The cure is, very oddly, to import data from Outlook into Mozilla Thunderbird and pop the Thunderbird files into the Evolution mail folder. Both Evolution and Thunderbird share the same file formats, so all is hunky-dory, since Evolution should just realise that they are there and bring them in.

That's what happened for me, and I have now migrated all of my old emails. Evolution's single file import wizard is there for those times when a spot of extra persuasion is needed; the data files are those without the file extensions. As it happened, I didn't need it.

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