On Fri, May 21, 1999 at 09:23:53PM -0400, Jim B wrote: > Hi all. Is there a good POP3 and/or IMAP4 client (console or GUI, doesn't > matter) that supports multiple accounts with easy switching between them... > and that can filter based on the "account" concept rather than just on > headers? > > If I'm not making sense, I'm looking for something for Linux that can do > what MS Outlook Express can do. Here's an example: > > One account is username "joe" and another account is username "tom." > > Someone sends to joe and the mail is filtered into his mailbox... meanwhile, > tom's mail is filtered into his mailbox. BUT, if someone BCCs joe, his > username will not appear in the headers... therefore, header-based filtering > will be useless. The client needs to be able to filter the mail into the > "joe" mailbox despite the fact that his address is not in the headers. The > idea is simple, it just needs to know "From what account did I download this > message?" in order to be able to direct it appropriately, despite what may > be in the headers of the message. > > Anyone know of such a client? Pine's "roles" don't cut it as a single login > cannot access multiple e-mail accounts. Also, procmail doesn't come into > the picture because the filtering rules must be client-based so that all > these mail accounts can be accessed from a single terminal login session, > rather than by logging out and then back into another session. > > Thanks!!! > > > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null > > Just my 2 cents: Mutt/fetchmail/exim works fine for me, with 2 accounts. Contrary to popular belief, it really isn't that hard to set up. My two email addresses are [EMAIL PROTECTED] and [EMAIL PROTECTED] [EMAIL PROTECTED] is my primary one.
I put this in my ~/.forward -- CUT HERE -- # Exim filter (required) if $h_To: contains "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" then save $home/Mail/mschess else save $home/Mail/inbox $endif -- END CUT -- Then, I put this in my ~/.muttrc (copy the sample one from /usr/doc/mutt and use it as a base) -- CUT HERE -- my_hdr From: Stephen Pitts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> # all messages sent when I am in the mschess folder have the right email address folder-hook =mschess my_hdr From: Stephen Pitts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> # and all others have my normal address folder-hook !=mschess my_hdr From: Stephen Pitts <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- END CUT -- Finally, I put this in my .fetchmailrc -- CUT HERE -- defaults fetchall expunge 500 poll pop-server protocol POP3: user smpitts pass my_password poll mail112.pair.com protocol POP3: user mschess pass my_other_password -- END CUT -- I migrated from Windows and Outlook Express and have found that this Linux system offers me several advantages: * I can send mail with a From address other than [EMAIL PROTECTED] (I couldn't get Outlook Express to do that for me) * I have folders that delete messages other than two weeks automatically, like my mailing lists folders * I can filter on ANY header in an email message. (Outlook Express can't filter on the Resent-Sender header that the debian lists use One of the hardest things for me was setting up email (that and finding a X server for my i740 card), but, once set up, it has been well worth it. -- Stephen Pitts [EMAIL PROTECTED] webmaster - http://www.mschess.org