On 16 Dec 2015, at 20:48, Steven M. Bellovin wrote:
I was reading
http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/technology/2015/02/email_overload_building_my_own_email_app_to_reach_inbox_zero.html
-- a novice decided to build his own mail client -- and it has some
interesting ideas on features.
I
On Dec 16, 2015, at 1:56 PM, Bart Lipman wrote:
> SaneBox has this functionality. You subscribe to their service and (among
> many other things) you can snooze emails and have them reappear in your inbox
> like new on a day and (more or less) time of your choice.
There are a lot of things I l
I understand your concern. If you want to read their response on this issue,
here’s what they say:
https://www.sanebox.com/security
Not trying to persuade you here — I’m comfortable with them, but I realize not
everyone will be.
Bart
On December 16, 2015 at 2:59:51 PM, Steven M. Bellovin (s
I will *not* hand someone else my email and/or my email credentials,
which is what they seem to need...
On 16 Dec 2015, at 14:56, Bart Lipman wrote:
SaneBox has this functionality. You subscribe to their service and
(among many other things) you can snooze emails and have them reappear
in yo
SaneBox has this functionality. You subscribe to their service and (among many
other things) you can snooze emails and have them reappear in your inbox like
new on a day and (more or less) time of your choice.
On December 16, 2015 at 2:48:43 PM, Steven M. Bellovin (s...@cs.columbia.edu)
wrote:
I was reading
http://www.slate.com/articles/technology/technology/2015/02/email_overload_building_my_own_email_app_to_reach_inbox_zero.html
-- a novice decided to build his own mail client -- and it has some
interesting ideas on features. The one that interests me the most is
the ability to se