Costin Guşă a écrit : > On Mon, Mar 9, 2009 at 3:55 PM, Jorey Bump <l...@joreybump.com> wrote: >> Charles Marcus wrote, at 03/09/2009 09:42 AM: >>> On 3/9/2009, Costin Gu_ (costi...@gmail.com) wrote: >>>> yes, it's true that people expect instant delivery; however I was >>>> thinking at short delays such as 5 minutes, since most regrettable >>>> errors are discovered within the next few seconds following the event, >>>> so keeping the mail in queue for extra five minutes wouldn't bother >>>> the majority. >>>> >>>> note that I didn't mention that I actually _want_ to do this, but this >>>> has come up as a proposed solution to these kind of people with whom I >>>> am interacting - I am supporting the IT in a field where being >>>> computer literate is not a mandatory skill for a manager. >>> This is actually an interesting idea... but I think it should only be >>> available on an opt-in basis, where the end user understands that all of >>> their mail will be subject to this delay... >>> >>> I wonder how hard some kind of automatic script processing would be, >>> where the user could just add a 'RECALL' to the subject beginning, and >>> have postfix delete the message from the queue if it found a match with >>> the sender and subject and then deliver a confirmation, or simply send a >>> 'Too late' response if there is no match... >> Isn't this best implemented at the MUA level? At the very least, a user >> can simply save drafts of all composed email, then review & send >> messages periodically. Not only does this address the problem, it is >> more convenient for everyone, including the user, who can edit the >> message in place before finally sending. > > composing drafts still does not prevent you from making mistakes when > you click "send" button on an unrevised draft. for example, you are > sure of the content but you could wrongly select the recipient in a > hurry. or mistype it. or be convinced that typing the very few letters > would select the contact it used to be selected, but by the chance a > new contact has been entered into the mua address book cache... and so > on.
everytime this happened to me, I only realised after I saw the recipient reply, or after many days... I actally thought of implementing this just for me (in which case, there is no interface problem, since I have full control on the server and I don't need a fancy UI....), but I realized that I would click on "recall" instantly anyway...