On Aug 24, 2016, at 2:07 PM, Patrik Fältström wrote:
> Virtual mailboxes are your friends!
>
> <https://stupid.domain.name/node/1895>
Bookmarked! Thanks!
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Brad Knowles
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B of additional storage.
I do wonder how Mailmate would do with this amount of mail.
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Brad Knowles
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he e-mail problem outside of that space. At least, not with
regards to stuff I can run myself on my own hardware.
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Brad Knowles
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things like CalDAV, WebDAV, etc
> Anything with an IMAP server implemented as an after-thought (Groupwise,
> Exchange, Yahoo, Outlook 365, GMX, and many more) is very likely to be buggy
> or primitive — or both.
But they gots the pretty, pretty GUI thingies, right? I mean, that’s all
at MUA they are coming from. Unfortunately, I think a rule importer
> would be a massive time-sink to implement usefully.
Moreover, it still wouldn't help with the problem of pushing the rules to be
executed on the server, so I would really be better off figuring out a way to
port Mail.a
On Sep 5, 2014, at 1:44 PM, John Grasty wrote:
> At some point, I'm sure I'll get antsy and want to try out spam assassin. I
> was hesitant as I heard that it can be a resource hog if not properly tuned.
It can be, sure. But it's not too hard to tune for reasonable
lient-side tool (e.g. SpamSieve)
> automatically mimic what a user would do to "mark as spam" or "mark as
> non-spam" for training the server's database. Those functions for Bayesian
> and similar server-side systems are designed for human-judged input to
> rev
On Jul 23, 2014, at 4:39 PM, Bram Heerink wrote:
> I would propose subuser and only implement i think the + sign.
I like subaddress, myself. Thanks!
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Brad Knowles
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uys on this list who know a lot more about RFCs than
I do. I'll let them choose whether or not to step forward and identify
themselves, and provide whatever advice they can.
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Brad Knowles
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D
quot;Encrypted subject" into the envelope subject line, which should get replaced
on the other end when the message gets decrypted.
Was it mutt or elm that did this? Don't remember -- it's been way too long.
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Brad Knowles
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s
the signature is encrypted in such a way that you can verify who
it came from. If you want to do the verification, you have to be able to use
the appropriate tools to do the decryption.
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Brad Knowles
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o do so for
a long time.
Maybe this thread will be the impetus I need to make this happen.
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Brad Knowles
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iOS, yes.
However, I'm not personally aware of any other MUAs on the planet that have
this feature.
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Brad Knowles
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om address, or other common operations in MailMate, you’re in for a
> rude surprise if the mailing list does #2.
Yup.
> I’m mentioning this here mainly because I suspect it’s may mean subtle
> changes in how MUAs handle lists.
Yup.
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to plain ASCII text,
or markdown. IMO -- the simpler, the better.
It will be interesting to see how Benny balances these requirements. ;-)
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Brad Knowles
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On Apr 3, 2014, at 9:16 AM, Ingo Lantschner wrote:
> So I would still prefer to leave in-word underscores unprocessed.
You mean like Github-flavored Markdown?
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Brad Knowles
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ort Sieve, but I can check that
out. Hopefully this program will still run under Mavericks.
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ing.
However, I have not yet had any chance to look at how they're implemented or
how to set them up.
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ven account on one server and stops any
further processing of any rules for any accounts on any server.
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Brad Knowles
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via Mail.app and manually feed them back to SpamSieve as confirmed
spam messages.
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