On 27 Apr 2002, Brian Nelson wrote: > Yeah, Debian-specific documentation for courier is non-existent. I > despise when developers don't include a README that explains the default > Debian configuration for a package. >
Did you file a bug? Or better yet a patch? > That said, there is a courier-doc package that mirrors the documentation > from the website. > > > Is there any way I can change it to use /var/mail/$USER for the INBOX > > and normally-named directories under ~/Mail for subfolders? I found > > that if I create a subfolder named "foo" it will be stored in > > ~/Maildir/.foo. > > AFAIK, the courier mail servers need to have all of the mail in a single > directory. It then follows the naming scheme "INBOX" at the top level > (~/Maildir on the local file system), with folders named "INBOX.foo" > (~/Maildir/.foo locally), and sub-folders within those named > "INBOX.foo.bar" (~/Maildir/.foo.bar locally). > > uw-imapd will do what you're asking, but it's a shitty mail server. > Porquoi? (Not that I'm necessarily disagreeing with you but I like to know what people think.) > > I also need recommendations for a win32 mail client that can handle > > IMAP and preferrably gpg/pgp. Outlook and Outlook Express are two entirely different programs. Outlook is not a good IMAP client (violates the spec in places.) but Outlook Express isn't bad. That's what I used when I used Windows. -- Jaldhar H. Vyas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> It's a girl! See the pictures - http://www.braincells.com/shailaja/ -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]