Le mardi 18 mai 2010 à 14:02 -0700, Tyler Brainerd a écrit : > i've actually been writing about evolution a lot on blog posts, and > how frustrating it is. I'd love to see it gone, as its slow with > multiple IMAP accounts, gives me false positives on my hotmail > accounts and downloads hundreds of messages duplicated, and does not > integrate into the messaging menu. I end up using gnome-do signed into > my gmail account for contacts, tom boy for notes, i sorta try to still > use it for a calender, and I use a different gmail checker to tell me > when I have new email. Why have it when it doesn't do any of its tasks > the best possible, and is huge and slow and awkward?
Tyler, I'd like to keep bugs and other behavior not intended by design out of the discussion. It might not be trivial, but those *can* be worked on and with easy collaboration with upstream. Struggling against upstream design decisions, however, is more complicated, and that's the problem I'm pointing to. I'm not saying bugs are irrelevant. But they are not the point I am raising here. So, for the sake of keeping the discussion noise-free, please pretend Evolution has no bugs and works as intended. It's the "intended" part I want do discuss. _______________________________________________ Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~ayatana Post to : ayatana@lists.launchpad.net Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~ayatana More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp