off-topic (of MM):
> That's because the user in question is unwisely using an Avast "security"
> suite that installs its own trusted root CA certificate and proceeds to
> hijack all SSL traffic and proxy it using bogus certificates signed by the
> Avast CA. This is a truly terrible behavioral m
On 18 Aug 2015, at 23:20, Bill Cole wrote:
That's because the user in question is unwisely using an Avast
"security" suite that installs its own trusted root CA certificate and
proceeds to hijack all SSL traffic and proxy it using bogus
certificates signed by the Avast CA. This is a truly terr
On 18 Aug 2015, at 16:48, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
Back to certificates. I've checked p01-p38 and they all provide the
same certificates and I wouldn't think there was a problem except for
the fact that I have an example from a user for which this is not
true. Connecting to `imap.mail.me.com`
On 18 Aug 2015, at 18:46, Shoshanna Green wrote:
Now MailMate doesn't crash on trying to send a message, but the
verification never seems to trigger, whether the recipient address is
in the list or not. If I change the condition to its negative -- that
is, change =[c] to !=[c] -- the verificat
On 17 Aug 2015, at 18:25, Bill Cole wrote:
On 16 Aug 2015, at 23:51, Jean-Pierre Gattuso wrote:
I have done that. When I double-click on an .eml file in the Finder,
it opens with MailMate. However, messages shown in the activity
viewer of BusyContacts still open with Mail rather than MailMate
On 18 Aug 2015, at 4:29, Scott A. McIntyre wrote:
For the past few months, every now and again when MailMate tries to
talk to Apple's iCloud email infrastructure, a certificate validation
error occurs.
The certificate that MailMate reports is a wildcard for
\*.mail.me.com, signed by Symantec
Perfect. I set up two. One for messages that were only to me, and one
for messages where I was the only person in the To line.

On 16 Aug 2015, at 11:30, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
On 14 Aug 2015, at 23:21, Kee Hinck
On 16 Aug 2015, at 9:31, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
I can also see I should have provided a more detailed example like
this:
#recipient.address =[c]
$'imap://u...@imap.example.com/AddressListMailbox'.#unquoted
Aha! I didn't have the single quotation marks around the mailbox name.
Now MailM
Ditto.
Sent from my iPad
On Aug 18, 2015, at 2:32 AM, Raphaël Fauveau
mailto:raphael.fauv...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Same issue here. It’s infrequent, but annoyingly enough to make me wonder why
this happens with MailMate only (never happened with Mail or Airmail before).
On 18 Aug 2015, at 4:29,