Stuff crap like this in .mailcap
text/html; /usr/local/bin/links -dump '%s'; copiousoutput; description=HTML 
Text; na metemplate=%s.html
text/html; /usr/local/bin/links '%s'; needsterminal; description=HTML Text; 
nametemp late=%s.html

I had them for all kinds of things but can't find that file anymore.

Things like antiword and stuff help.  At one point I had about a
$random_file to ascii converter for about everything.

On Wed, Feb 09, 2011 at 05:38:38PM +0100, Peter N. M. Hansteen wrote:
> During recent months I've joined some mailing lists with fairly good
> signal to noise ratio on a specific topic, the only snag being that a
> distressingly large number of otherwise sane messages have been
> written using mail clients (fsvo) that by default bury the content in
> "rich" formatting that makes it hard for old-style mail readers to
> cope.
> 
> Telling people off for their choice of mail clients is not an option
> (some at least have had that choice made for them), so as a workaround
> I probably need to start looking around for a mail client that will
> make reading Outlook and peers' output less painful.
> 
> Does such a beast exist, preferably among OpenBSD packages (as in, it
> has to run on OpenBSD, but I can build locally if needs be)? 
> 
> I've tried and hated both Evolution and Thunderbird, but surely there
> must be other choices?
> 
> - Peter
> -- 
> Peter N. M. Hansteen, member of the first RFC 1149 implementation team
> http://bsdly.blogspot.com/ http://www.bsdly.net/ http://www.nuug.no/
> "Remember to set the evil bit on all malicious network traffic"
> delilah spamd[29949]: 85.152.224.147: disconnected after 42673 seconds.

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