On 22 Apr 2015, at 2:25, John Purnell wrote:
Following on from Bill's suggestions, a 4th option would be to run the
following command in Terminal:
sudo printf '%s\n' 'setenv MM_GPG /usr/local/bin/gpg2' >>
/etc/launchd.conf
and then log out and back in. This would also set the variable
pers
On 21 Apr 2015, at 22:58, Bill Cole wrote:
On 21 Apr 2015, at 13:28, Christopher LILJENSTOLPE wrote:
I've moved off of GPGTools, and am running the current gpg2 tooling
from GNU (brew package, if anyone is interested). However, it seems
as if the GPGTools path is stuck somewhere in the syste
On 22 Apr 2015, at 7:39, Phill Coxon wrote:
Haven’t figured out how to handle IMAP subfolders on the server (so
they appear in the top mailboxes list) but I’ll get there.
Currently, the only way to do that is to create a smart mailbox based on
the IMAP mailbox. This is going to mostly work as
Hi Benny, is this something that could be tweaked with ease?
On 15 Apr 2015, at 13:30, John Cooper wrote:
On 2015-04-15 14:55, Allie Martin wrote:
I'd seriously love to see this as well.
Me too!
On 15 Apr 2015, at 14:46, Chris Jones wrote:
Hi Benny et al,
Just wondering if it would be
On 22 Apr 2015, at 0:45, Billy Youdelman wrote:
Is it possible to add the reply-to address to the info displayed in
the top of the message viewer?
Well, low-level most things are possible, but it's not straightforward.
If you want to play with it then you need to read [this
page](http://manu
On 22 Apr 2015, at 21:52, Chris Jones wrote:
[multiline message outline view]
Hi Benny, is this something that could be tweaked with ease?
No. Technically, it is a bit more likely to be implemented after
MailMate required 10.7+, because of how the Apple outline view works
internally. But it
Greetings,
On 22 Apr 2015, at 12:48, Benny Kjær Nielsen wrote:
On 21 Apr 2015, at 22:58, Bill Cole wrote:
On 21 Apr 2015, at 13:28, Christopher LILJENSTOLPE wrote:
I've moved off of GPGTools, and am running the current gpg2 tooling
from GNU (brew package, if anyone is interested). However
Yeah, I’ve only ever seen this feature implemented as a very
low-information view. I think Microsoft was the first to do this with
Outlook (2003 or 2007) and it’s still not very customizable.
Thunderbird also implemented a vertical view, and allowed you to pack
all of your columns into it, but