s. keeling wrote: > Steve Lamb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: >> It lacks the ability to use the SMTP interface to send mail, being >> restricted to the command line to get the job done.
> It's an MUA. Use SMTP. Exactly. I would love to but it can't. >> It lacks filtering. > Like a washing machine sucks as a dishwasher. Yet filtering belongs in the client, especially if that client has multiple accounts since one wouldn't want the same filters to apply to all accounts. >> It lacks a decent IMAP implementation. Hint, IMAP is not a glorified >> POP. > Don't care. You don't. I do. I rather like being able to read mail on my Debian laptop, my WinXP Game machine or any machine with a web-capable browser and get all of my mail all of the time. >> It lacks a decent multi-account implementation. Having to configure >> every single item by hand without the concept of account inheritance is >> a nightmare. > You have a ridiculously complicated "system" for organizing your mail, > and it's mutt's fault for doing what it does well. No. A rediculously complicated system? What's so complicated about it. Let's see, I have home mail and I have work mail. I configure my home account with 1 signature, 1 POP/IMAP server, 1 SMTP server. All the mail remains separate. All my home filters only apply to my home mail. I need a work account I configure 1 signature, 1 POP/IMAP server, 1 SMTP server. All mail remains separate. All my work filters only apply to my work mail. Mutt, by contrast, requires you to first.... learn how to run an SMTP server, shove all your work and home mail through it where you then have to write filters which separate it back out. Nevermind that all filters apply to all mail all of the time. Then, once it is filtered out, you need to go through for every freakin' folder and define which address it is supposed to come from, which sent-mail folder it is supposed to go to, which signature to use. Add a new folder? Have to do it all over again. And heaven help the person who wants to send home mail through his home SMTP server and work mail through his work SMTP server because of sticky little work policies which state that all mail that passes through the work server is subject to being read at any time by any upper management or security personell, work servers are not to be used for personal mail and any work mail which is going between two employees in the company must go through the work SMTP server whenever possible to prevent outside companies from being able to record and review confidential documents. So know what that means? Right, back to the SMTP server to mangle outbound mail to go to the right server and pray they don't nail you for the Received line. That alone shows that Mutt is far more complex than it needs to be. Separate how outbound mail gets to its destination in modern clients *one freaking configuration option*. To do it in Mutt requires advanced SMTP server techniques! > They're misinformed. Start with the wrong premises and you'll reach > the wrong conclusion. Mutt's an MUA. Do one thing, and do it well. They're not misinformed at all. Mutt doesn't do that one thing well. It does it poorly and requires the end user to spend hours to do achieve what other clients do in minutes. -- Steve C. Lamb | But who decides what they dream? PGP Key: 8B6E99C5 | And dream I do... -------------------------------+---------------------------------------------
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