1) Apologies for the lack of line wraps; I forgot to turn on
auto-fill-mode in Emacs.
2) You were exactly right. An evil, old version of mutt in /usr/bin,
which apparently is prepended to my path only when I ssh into my box,
not telnet. I'll have to look into that.
It always seems to be the si
* Brian Stearns <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [11/11/00, 13:59:18]:
> I've configured OpenSSH at home, and I'm using PuTTY at work to establish
> a secure terminal session from work to home. Yet again, works great.
It's not a PuTTY issue. I use it at work and it works :)
> Finallly, I thought perhaps
On Saturday, 11 November 2000 at 13:59, Brian Stearns wrote:
> When I telnet into my home machine, I run mutt from the command line.
> It comes up immediately, automatically connects to my IMAP server, and
> allows me to browse my IMAP folders. When I SSH into my machine,
> running mutt from the
After searching the mutt-user archives as best I could, here's a question I, as a new
Mutt user, haven't yet been able to resolve:
I've got a Red Hat Linux 6.2 box at home (this box is behind a firewall which gets IP
dialtone from a cable modem). It collects email from my various accounts and