Reid Thompson wrote:
On Tue, 2008-05-20 at 12:20 +, Pete Biggs wrote:
Or what about 'redirect'ing the mail to yourself i.e.
Message -> Forward As -> Redirect
Then fill in your own address as the To: and change the subject line to
whatever you want. This will cause a new message to
On Tue, 2008-05-20 at 12:20 +, Pete Biggs wrote:
>
> Or what about 'redirect'ing the mail to yourself i.e.
>
> Message -> Forward As -> Redirect
>
> Then fill in your own address as the To: and change the subject line to
> whatever you want. This will cause a new message to be created (
>
> > > Anyway. Maybe she would have better luck with Evolution's email label
> > > feature? I've not used it myself but it sounds like something she could
> > > make use of. The only problem is if she wants to have lots and lots of
> > > them created and deleted relatively quickly it might be
On Mon, 2008-05-19 at 19:41 -0400, Reid Thompson wrote:
> How about the following ...
> Edit as new
> Modify subject
> save as draft
> use draft copy as 'key' email
> setup filter that can be run on Drafts folder to move 'key' email back to
> inbox,
> or setup a filter to move/copy ALL pertinent
On Mon, 2008-05-19 at 19:41 -0400, Reid Thompson wrote:
> Reid Thompson wrote:
[...]
> > Anyway. Maybe she would have better luck with Evolution's email label
> > feature? I've not used it myself but it sounds like something she could
> > make use of. The only problem is if she wants to have l
Reid Thompson wrote:
> On Mon, 2008-05-19 at 23:15 +0100, andy wrote:
>> Is there someway that I (it'll be me doing the tweaking) can set
>> Evolution up so that someone can edit the subject line of an email
>> they have received so that it can be stored in the inbox (wherever)
>> with the newly e