onfusion.
Still, you might find it is a solution that is somewhat effective on an
individual level, and not everyone needs to concern themselves with the
systemic costs of those kinds of actions and how they might scale up if some
others, many others, or all others choose them.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
folder and there's value in setting it to an IMAP folder.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
s, you can search for html with /html instead of hitting .
Honestly I'm not sure this happens enough to be worth automating into a macro,
teaching your brain to hit 'jj' is pretty easy and arguably a better and more
flexible and adaptive solution. But up to you!
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
27;j', 'j', RET
assuming that it's a normal multipart/alternative with two parts so two
down-arrows ('j') get you to the 2nd part.
Or alternatively, you could create a macro to do the same, although I'm not
sure it's worth the bother?
--
jh...@alum.mit.e
mutt to send those kinds of messages, so I'm not sure I would personally find a
mutt feature to do this all that helpful. But that's just me.)
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
ll, I noticed it was taking a little more time to actually send than normal,
and then I was horrified to discover it.
I'm not sure whether this suggests this is a default in need of attention or
clever heuristics (not that mutt is big on this) or what...
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkin
ag on the tagged messages.
And similarly clear-flag ('W') for the opposite situation.
(I don't understand Patrick's reply)
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
> Is there any command that will work with tagged messages to
> mark them as read irrespective of their current status or
> thread status?
st people would choose.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
with the results.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
meine wrote on Sun, 11 Sep 2022
at 15:16:11 EDT in :
> > Why isn't there a default binding for the "imap-fetch-mail" function,
> > just like 'G' for POP3? I know I can assign it, but was curious
>
&g
a better way to do that.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
r MTAs and MUAs and other mail software. That, of course, speaks to
the nuanced and pragmatic analysis.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
what? I am confused what we are discussing.
> I could live with that if it were labelled, with a new MIME subtype, but I
> agree that a new subtype probably
And even more so here.
John Hawkinson wrote on Wed, 31 Aug 2022
at 16:38:11 EDT in :
> I suppose I should send some 2,000-ch
so at your own peril, and the rest of us
> should not be expected to accommodate you.
I don't really think we're flouting the standards.
I suppose I should send some 2,000-character paragraph emails as tests to see
what happens, but I very much doubt there will be problems as a result.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
ide a .png on". It could
certainly be worse (and it often is), but it's not great.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
so fortunate.
As for standards-compliance, that's a red herring. Long lines are not going to
trip up any modern client, they're just not.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
bviously a non-starter when the goal is to interoperate with today's
technology as much as possible.
> Maybe text/plain format=flowed is a solution. It's displayed correctly by
Maybe.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
> software that assumes format=fixed (on a screen that&
naged to get it to work right.
And yes, I toggle M-x visual-line-mode in Emacs while composing, sometimes
multiple times, which simulates how the email may be read.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
Tavis Ormandy wrote on Sun, 28 Aug 2022
at 20:28:29 EDT in :
> Hello, long time mutt u
On Thu, 20 Jan 2022, at 13:29, Chris Green wrote:
> I was thinking I might need to use muttLisp
Now _that's_ something I've missed so far. Looks neat. Though the only use I
personally see at the moment is replacing repeat statements in muttrc with
varying arguments (mailboxes ..., alias ...) wit
On Thu, 20 Jan 2022, at 10:52, Chris Green wrote:
> The first one is easy (I think?!) but how can I do the second one
> where my_hdr bears no relation to the hostname?
According to the mutt man page:
> It is also possible to substitute the output of a Unix command in an
> initialization file. T
On Wed, 22 Dec 2021, at 22:50, Oleg A. Mamontov wrote:
> The feature of neomutt that completely determines my choice is an
> elegant built-in integration with notmuch. Really worth to try.
Like Oleg I see the notmuch integration including the notmuch:// protocol for
folders as the biggest selling
please share some more information so we can figure out how to
address it and how concerned to be? Is there supporting information?
Is it a rumor? If rumor, what's the provenance? Heard from a
friend-of-a-friend-of-a-friend? From a reliable source you can
explain, etc?
Thank you.
--
jh...@alum.m
rare requirement, although of course many people never do it. It is also,
however, out of scope for mutt — mutt isn't a tool for searching multiple
mailboxes. Perhaps there's a better mailing list for this sort of question?
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
> Chris Green
he
options, current or extent, proposed or in use, are confusing to anyone at all.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
On Sat, 23 Oct 2021, at 16:21, Bastian wrote:
> The stack I use is exim, spamassassin, dovecot on debian
> stable since ~2006.
If somebody would set something up new today, I would recommend the following
3-piece software stack:
1. postfix as the SMTP server and Let's Encrypt for a proper valid
hell.org>:
> Have you tried setting hostname=yahoo.com in your .muttrc? I haven't
> tried it, but it seems like that would work.
Maybe I'm misinterpretting the original request, but I don't think that's what
is desired. But maybe so (see above).
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
ly a one-time cost and
sometimes it's easy to argue it's worth it for the greater good, but that's a
tough argument to make here.
But of course you're free to set your own configuration. Or we could include a
sample commented line in the muttrc labelled "# Make forwarding look like
Outlook's" or whatever. But I think a much more compelling case is required to
change the default.
Of course, others may disagree.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
forwarding is.
Indeed, I sometimes wonder if we'd be better off without the leading "[",
but I haven't brought myself to try to save that single character.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
On Thu, Oct 7, 2021 at 10:24 PM ಚಿರಾಗ್ ನಟರಾಜ್
wrote:
> 12021/06/39 09:27.23 ನಲ
On Mon, Sep 27, 2021 at 12:48:11PM -0400, Mark H. Wood wrote:
> I wanted to bind the Enter key on the numeric pad so that it works the
> same way as the Enter on the main key grid. I entered ":exec
> what-key", hit pad-Enter, and was told that it is "Char = , Octal
> = 527, Decimal = 343". So I e
On Fri, Sep 03, 2021 at 06:59:23PM +0100, Steve Karmeinsky wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 02, 2021 at 07:21:30PM +0200 or thereabouts, Jens John wrote:
> > On Thu, 2 Sep 2021, at 19:12, David J. J. Ring, Jr. wrote:
> > > What does gmail really want? Gmail or GMail or something differen
On Thu, 2 Sep 2021, at 19:12, David J. J. Ring, Jr. wrote:
> What does gmail really want? Gmail or GMail or something different?
>
> Thanks in advance for your replies and help. I'm sorry I'm confused
> but it is confusing.
Accidentally, I think they changed something because by mbsync config
On Thu, 29 Jul 2021, at 16:37, Bastian wrote:
> On 29Jul21 09:38-0400, hy...@nasalinux.net wrote:
> > Is "fetchmail" still a thing?
> Yup. at least for me. Should I change to a modern tool?
fetchmail is still getting regularly updated :) Though fetchmail does one-way
sync = pull.
According to th
On Thu, 22 Jul 2021, at 17:38, David Lowry-Duda wrote:
> Threading is amazing, it's true. It's something that mutt does correctly
> and the big webmails don't do correctly.
Correction, it's something any other mail client simply does not in any
bearable way. It's just so nice and tidy in mutt. P
Chris Green wrote on Tue, 29 Jun 2021
at 13:31:49 EDT in :
> How do you execute a *command* from the mutt command prompt?
>
> So, for example, having hit : to get to the command prompt how can I
> do to show/hide the sidebar?
:exec sidebar-toggle-visible
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
clients will convert
everything to local time.
To put it different, it's not so much that I don't want to the timezone math
(although I don't really), it's that I am confident that the people I deal with
do not.
I'm sure your experience may be different, but those ar
hought it was worth talking about the problem, perhaps as a way to inform...I
don't know what, perhaps future development, but probably not.
Thanks for listening.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
On Wed, 5 May 2021, at 15:38, Gregory Anders wrote:
> Has anyone attempted this, and if so would you be willing to share?
I had the following two setups related to that over time:
(a) When I had my own Postfix mail server, I had rspamd add a _short_ extra
header to emails which pass DKIM validat
The IMAP FETCH command allegedly supports retrieving individual sections of a
message, including the headers and parsed sections of the body based on MIME
parts. I have no idea what the support for this feature is like.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
imap_list_subscribed
set imap_check_subscribed
I am using StartMail as my email provider. When I go to their webmail interface
I do see the new TurboTax
folder listed as a subfolder of Inbox. I have several subfolders and they all
appear in the Mutt sidebar
except for the new TurboTax folder.
Thank you,
John
Thank you - where do you put the python3 script and how do you let mutt know it
is there?
Hi Folks,
How do you all deal with HTML email?
Thank you,
John
On Sat, 20 Mar 2021, at 20:24, Julius Hamilton wrote:
> Thanks very much.
> I'm a beginner to this, so I'd appreciate being able to ask a few
> questions about setting this up.
> It asked for the path to my email archive. I had a folder on my desktop
> called Mail, but it's empty, and not connected
On Sat, 20 Mar 2021, at 10:42, Julius Hamilton wrote:
> Hello Mutt users,
>
> I would like to know if there is a way to retrieve a list of emails from
> a particular user at stdout in bash, rather than launching the mutt
> application. Or, if one can launch mutt with the search already
> executed.
On Thu, 7 Jan 2021, at 18:25, tech-lists wrote:
>
> I guess lots of people would use mutt with vim-console.
>
> Can anyone tell me please what setting they use for line
> wrapping? I thought in .vimrc it'd be
>
> set textwidth=72
>
> but that doesn't seem to work. Is it a setting in .muttrc
> o
On Wed, 30 Dec 2020, at 13:11, Arsen STASIC wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is there no one interested in autocrypt support in Debian or Ubuntu?
>
> cheers,
> -arsen
I marked myself as affected on the Launchpad bug. Not seeing anything moving
too fast here though by nature of the upstream distros concerned.
tatus#hl=en&v=issue&sid=1&iid=a8b67908fadee664c68c240ff9f529ab
Google's alleged "incident report"
http://www.google.com/appsstatus/ir/4et50yp2ckm8otv.pdf (linked from the
dashboard).
You can also monitor Google's appstatus dashboard via RSS at
https://www
Setting Bcc and using record have different functions, and although there is a
lot of overlap, the former tells you something about the mail delivery
infrastructure.
I use
my_hdr Bcc: jh...@alum.mit.edu
to set bcc unconditionally, without a hook.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
Remco
Hello,
Does Mutt have a graphical interface that would work well with the Mate desktop
environment?
Thanks,
John
--
John J. Boyer
Email: john.bo...@abilitiessoft.org
website: http://www.abilitiessoft.org
Status: Company dissolved but website and email addresses live.
Location: Madison
I guess it's collateral, but I was surprised that I couldn't get :toggle to
work with a $my_foo variable. I guess it would not really have helped me make
progress, but seemed like it could be a building block in some more complex
scheme.
Thanks for any thoughts.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
Hello,
My insurance organization insists on sending Zimcorp Secure messages. is there
a way to handle these in Mutt?
Thanks,
John
--
John J. Boyer
Email: john.bo...@abilitiessoft.org
website: http://www.abilitiessoft.org
Status: Company dissolved but website and email addresses live
On Mon, 4 May 2020, at 22:54, Kevin Monceaux wrote:
> My employer is trying to force me to downgrade to Outlook. One of the
> powers that be came up with the brilliant idea of having a standard company
> signature, with logo, specific font requirements, etc. Is there any way to
> include such a s
flowed, but there seem to be
technical difficulties making that work reliably, so it's an OK substitute.
> Insisting that the world switch from HTML to plaintext for e-mail is
> just tilting at a windmill.
I think this view is correct.
--
jh...@alum.mit.edu
John Hawkinson
On Sat, Apr 25, 2020 at 09:46:48PM -0500, David Engel wrote:
> IT guy refuses to install any Outlook plugin for them to properly
> handle encypted emails.
Outlook has pretty comprehensive, native support for encrypting and
signing with S/MIME. Perhaps your IT guy would be more open to just
using a
On Sat, 4 Apr 2020, at 09:41, Vegard Svanberg wrote:
> Suggestions? What does everyone else do?
If you're already SSHing to your mutt instance, that is, using email
online-only, it doesn't like like webmail would be the worst bet you could
make. I can recommend Fastmail.com; their webmail applic
On Wed, 1 Apr 2020, at 06:22, raf wrote:
> e.g. Add a CC header to f...@work.com whenever
> sending/replying/forwarding from m...@work.com unless the
> email is already going to f...@work.com.
I think a combination of hooks or only a send2-hook could be used.
How about something along these lines
Apologies for answering a solved thread; I received raf's followup only after
reconnecting to the server when sending my reply.
Cheers.
On Thu, 31 Oct 2019 23:47:38 +1300
martin f krafft wrote:
> Regarding the following, written by "John Long" on 2019-10-31 at
> 10:30 Uhr +:
> >1. Commonly done != standard. There are standards for things like
> >MIME, POP3, IMAP etc. I'm not aware of ANSI
On Thu, 31 Oct 2019 23:49:37 +1300
martin f krafft wrote:
> Regarding the following, written by "John Long" on 2019-10-31 at
> 10:17 Uhr +:
> >> The approach Kevin proposed is completely HTML-agnostic and leaves
> >> it up to the user to provide an externa
On Wed, 30 Oct 2019 16:29:31 -0500
Derek Martin wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 30, 2019 at 11:29:31AM +0000, John Long wrote:
> > > I don’t think this is about right and wrong, and not only because
> > > there is no objectivity. multipart/alternative is an accepted
> > >
On Wed, 30 Oct 2019 15:49:05 -0500
Derek Martin wrote:
> On Wed, Oct 30, 2019 at 11:31:21AM +0000, John Long wrote:
> > That doesn't really help. From my point the issue is not only what I
> > have to configure or what can be configured, but also how much code
> > is be
On Thu, 31 Oct 2019 09:29:23 +1300
martin f krafft wrote:
> Regarding the following, written by “John Long” on 2019-10-30 at
> 11:31 Uhr +:
> >
> > From my point the issue is not only what I have to configure or
> > what can be configured, but also how much code
On Wed, 30 Oct 2019 07:53:30 -0700
Sean Greenslade wrote:
> Of course there's massive selection bias in this list. No question
> about that. I just wanted to point out that there definitely are some
> younger Mutters out there. Though I tend to fall more on the grumpy
> about HTML mails side of t
On Wed, 30 Oct 2019 23:37:43 +1300
martin f krafft wrote:
> Regarding the following, written by “Nuno Silva” on 2019-10-30 at
> 09:21 Uhr +:
> >
> > There are users who don’t need text/html. It’s okay to want some
> > way to use HTML for e-mail in mutt, but I’d say it’s not okay to
> > say e
On Wed, 30 Oct 2019 23:53:40 +1300
martin f krafft wrote:
> Regarding the following, written by “Dave Woodfall” on 2019-10-30 at
> 10:05 Uhr +:
> >
> > I don’t think embracing wrong email practices is the way forward.
>
> I don’t think this is about right and wrong, and not only because
> t
On Tue, 29 Oct 2019 14:50:05 -0400
Patrick Shanahan wrote:
> * Grant Edwards [10-29-19 13:10]:
> > On 2019-10-28, Matthias Apitz wrote:
> > > El día lunes, octubre 28, 2019 a las 04:50:40p. m. -0500, Derek
> > > Martin escribió:
> > >> > FWIW, I (as a mutt user for 15++ years) do not need th
On Mon, 29 Jul 2019 15:07:40 -0300
Luciano ES wrote:
> You don't understand the problem.
Sorry, my bad.
> Read my initial query again:
No, I don't think so. I'm not on your payroll.
/jl
On Mon, 29 Jul 2019 13:47:34 -0300
Luciano ES wrote:
> I want to archive almost all of my email in MH mail boxes to an
> external disk. The idea is to free up space in the running disk.
>
> I thought I could just move ~/Mail to external and start with a new
> empty Mail directory, but then I re
Hi, I don't know the answer because I set all my devices to UTC.
But I can suggest it's difficult to find all the places where your time
zone is leaked so setting it to UTC or some misc. time zone is probably
not a bad idea.
/jl
On Wed, 24 Jul 2019 07:06:52 +
Ryan Smith wrote:
> By default
Hi Mutters,
I haven't been following the thread but just to reply to a few points
with the names of the posters removed in order to focus on content
rather than who said what:
> > It's not your
> > mail client's job to protect you from every conceibable system
> > failure which might cause data
On Sun, 2 Jun 2019, at 05:36, Frank Watt wrote:
> Am I to assume that I would have had sendmail in my environment at the
> time the deb was installed? So I'd need to remove it so that I can
> compile mutt with built-in SMTP. What else would I need to bear in
> mind?
>
> I'm a bit apprehensive ab
Thank you for a superb, helpful email Cameron.
I'll go over this and a few things posted upthread and come back with
questions later.
Thanks,
/jl
On Thu, 23 May 2019 09:56:08 +1000
Cameron Simpson wrote:
> On 22May2019 15:03, John Long wrote:
> >I have around 10 email
Ciao Francesco,
On Wed, 22 May 2019 17:41:37 +0200
Francesco Ariis wrote:
> I have many accounts, a couple of simple hooks like
>
> folder-hook fa-ml "set from=fa...@ariis.it"
How is it used?
> > 2. I have around 100,000 emails right now between all my accounts. I
> > have one pop account
On Wed, 22 May 2019 15:40:15 +
"Dan Ciprus (dciprus)" wrote:
> If you are a mobile user then things are a bit more complex.
I have machines in two countries (work and home) and I like to have all
the email in both places so I can get to it.
I have a subset of the accounts on a phone also.
Hi,
I've been a casual mutter for around 10 years. I have it working with
PGP, S/MIME, all that I need...for one account. The only thing is, I am
increasingly dissatisfied with the direction GUI clients are going. I
had one I have been using for years and it just keeps getting more and
more featur
On Thu, 28 Mar 2019, at 13:32, Max Görner wrote:
> Could some readers of this list please share their opinion/experiences with
> me?
As someone who is only using mutt's threaded view, it's terrific and achieves
exactly the behaviour I want from a mail client. mutt's way of displaying
threads --
aph.
Like this.
I'm not particular proud of this, and it's incompatible with quoting, so I put
hard line breaks when I quote text, and it's somewhat annoying to compose (I
use emacs' M-x visual-line-mode to do so), but it certainly wraps properly in
most clients.
--jh...@mit.edu
John Hawkinson
ndreds or thousands of recipients...
--jh...@mit.edu
John Hawkinson
ssage. Adding headers seems fine, but modifying
the existing ones seems like a line that shouldn't be crossed. In a world where
we have DKIM, it seems an especially bad idea, although I don't know if DKIM
tends to include the To: header in its crypto hashes).
--jh...@mit.edu
John Hawki
est of them that are easily repeatable.
How do others approach this problem?
Does anyone else think that mutt should have a better solution, like a way
to exclude messages from ~p based on their From: field? If so what would that
llok like, and how should it interact with lists and subscribedlists, if at all?
Thanks.
--jh...@mit.edu
John Hawkinson
On Tue, 10 Apr 2018, at 21:34, Grant Edwards wrote:
> I have my mailcap entry set up so that "viewing" an html message uses
> w3m but "printing" an html message opens it in chromium
Many thanks for pointing me to the `print=` configuration option in mailcap!
I used to save the HTML message part m
On Sun, Apr 08, 2018 at 01:51:36PM +0530, Kumar Appaiah wrote:
Currently, on Debian, my muttprint seems to work with Perl
5.26.1. Can you tell me what the problem you are facing might be?
Debian's version is heavily patched. OP may want to try the most recent
Debian version after applying all
On Tue, 20 Mar 2018, at 05:17, David Woodfall wrote:
> Is there a way of speeding this up? I'm not using IMAP or anything,
> just plain maildir.
You should try `header_cache`. It worked wonders when I was still using a HDD
and Maildir, reducing mailbox load times from ~4s to .5s for large maildir
On Mon, Jul 18, 2016 at 08:56:00AM +0200, Matthias Apitz wrote:
> El d??a Monday, July 18, 2016 a las 06:05:59AM +0000, John Long escribi??:
>
> > So I find myself wanting to move several gig of emails from Linux to
> > Android. The bulk of it is in MH format although I have a
So I find myself wanting to move several gig of emails from Linux to
Android. The bulk of it is in MH format although I have a few mutt instances
using maildir.
I figure there is probably a ton of email savvy on this list, can anybody
give me an idea how I can accomplish this?
I haven't picked an
Kevin,
Congrats to you and all the mutt developers and community.
In all honesty mutt is one of the least buggy pieces of open source software
I have used. I don't ever remembering having a problem with it. I'm
reluctant to upgrade and probably won't. :-)
/jl
P.S. Sorry, this should not have be
On Wed, Mar 23, 2016 at 11:52:12AM +0100, bastian-muttu...@t6l.de wrote:
> On 22Mar16 08:40 +1100, Cameron Simpson wrote:
> > >>TZ=UTC mutt
> > >Thank you! A most elegant quick solution!
> >
> > On the othe hand, I do not think mutt makes the header.
>
> The input to my sendmail= script lists a
On Tue, Mar 22, 2016 at 08:40:21AM +1100, Cameron Simpson wrote:
> On the othe hand, I do not think mutt makes the header. I'm in
> compose mode right now with headers and the Date: header is not
> there.
Aside from the Received: header that was already mentioned upthread, Mutt
can add headers wh
On Wed, Feb 17, 2016 at 05:01:05AM +, Jeffery Small wrote:
> John:
>
> Thanks you for all the great information.
You're welcome. Crypto is interesting and very practical. But don't get too
interested. Most of the mixmaster developers and several key cryptographers
have
On Mon, Feb 15, 2016 at 08:32:18PM -0800, Jeffery Small wrote:
>
> I just installed mixmaster on my Ubuntu 15.10 system and am trying it out.
> I have a question. The mutt manual says:
>
> "To use it [i.e., mixmaster], you'll have to obey certain restrictions.
> Most important, you cannot use th
I have an unusual issue. I have recently had to reinstall mutt
(actually my whole operating system). I had all of my config files
saved, so I relatively painlessly was able to get all of my software
back up to date. However, when I run mutt now (this had never been
a problem before), scrolling thr
Actually no, here is a link to a scrot that is full size. 647x462 pixels
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/23115609/Selection_002.png
On Mon, Aug 03, 2015 at 10:39:22AM -0700, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
Doesn't this make your mutt window way wide?
--
John
d pager \CP sidebar-prev
bind pager \CN sidebar-next
bind pager \CO sidebar-open
https://doc-0g-80-docs.googleusercontent.com/docs/securesc/ha0ro937gcuc7l7deffksulhg5h7mbp1/g7rtu2d3gqfs3uk5ensjkhnjhm20l6nb/143861760/08771943643953911230/*/0B05fj21T_0AtMndZZjlxSjh2V2c?e
--
John
gin and password information:
set imap_user="j...@jfniendorf.org"
set imap_pass="dummy_password"
--
John
On Sun, Jun 21, 2015 at 02:42:25PM +0200, jonas hedman wrote:
I think I have to convince my friends to get decent email clients =)
Hey, at least you have managed to get them to try and use encryption!
My friends and family can't be bothered. :-(
--
John
Great - thank you guys!
--
John
misread this, but how specifically are you using %?X?{%2X}&%4c?
How is this written in your .muttrc file?
Thank you
--
John
ou have to "press any key to continue" after it
finishes).
This seems to be the "official" site for ripmime:
http://www.pldaniels.com/ripmime/
--
Chris Spackman
Hey thanks Chris,
This is really handy! I wish I'd known about it earlier.
--
John
can't
Derek> handle people posting both to mailing lists and to you directly
Derek> at the same time, perhaps you should stop subscribing to mailing
Derek> lists...
Exactly - I've been on this list for a few years. It seems that Patrick
wakes up in a bad mood EVERY day.
--
John
On Thu, May 14, 2015 at 10:20:06AM -0400, cipher wrote:
port 25 is correct, I also have 587 and 465 open on my exchange server, and all
give the same error
On May 14, 2015, at 9:52 AM, John Niendorf wrote:
I am no expert, but is port 25 the correct port?
set smtp_url = "smt
I am no expert, but is port 25 the correct port?
On 05/14/2015 03:14 PM, cipher wrote:
> cant send email, and when trying to send email get a certificate error
>
>
> [ with these settings ]
>
> set smtp_url = "smtp://u...@mail.domain.com:25/"
> set ssl_starttls=yes
>
> [ get this ]
> Authentic
On Wed, Apr 29, 2015 at 07:33:01PM +0200, Thomas Klausner wrote:
> Is there a way to configure mutt in such a way that I can read mails
> encrypted using my old key and ones encrypted using my current key in
> the same session?
Expired x.509 keys are one of the true pains in the ass of email secu
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