* Ulrich Lauther on Tuesday, April 08, 2014 at 08:27:53 +0200
> The concept of "message is from you" is not clear to me.
> How does mutt decide whether a message is from me or not?
> Does it look at the From: field, and if so, what is it compared to?
> My login-name?
Read about the alternates comm
++ 07/04/14 13:36 +0200 - Patrick Ben Koetter:
>is it possible to automatically send encrpyted messages to GnuPG groups?
Maybe you are looking for the solution I am using.
I am sending lots of encrypted e-mail to a number of mailinglist with a
list of subscribers that doesn't change frequently.
On Tue, Apr 08, 2014 at 08:48:04AM +0100, Christian Ebert wrote:
> * Ulrich Lauther on Tuesday, April 08, 2014 at 08:27:53 +0200
> > The concept of "message is from you" is not clear to me.
> > How does mutt decide whether a message is from me or not?
> > Does it look at the From: field, and if so,
* Ulrich Lauther [04-08-14 05:11]:
> On Tue, Apr 08, 2014 at 08:48:04AM +0100, Christian Ebert wrote:
> > * Ulrich Lauther on Tuesday, April 08, 2014 at 08:27:53 +0200
> > > The concept of "message is from you" is not clear to me.
> > > How does mutt decide whether a message is from me or not?
> >
On Tue 08.04.2014 11:09:26, Ulrich Lauther wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 08, 2014 at 08:48:04AM +0100, Christian Ebert wrote:
> > * Ulrich Lauther on Tuesday, April 08, 2014 at 08:27:53 +0200
> > > The concept of "message is from you" is not clear to me.
> > > How does mutt decide whether a message is from
On Tue, Apr 08, 2014 at 02:33:08PM +0200, Andre Klärner wrote:
>
> Actually the manual specifies this pretty nicely:
>
> == the fine manual, chapter 3.11:
> Many users receive e-mail under a number of different addresses. To fully
> use
> Mutt's features here, the program must be able to rec
On Mon, Apr 07, 2014 at 05:43:15PM -0500, Derek Martin wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 07, 2014 at 11:14:44PM +0200, Ulrich Lauther wrote:
> > %-18.18F does not work for me: I still see my own name.
> > However, %-18.18t achieves what I want.
>
> Check out the alternates command; I believe that's why you're
On Tue, Apr 08, 2014 at 02:33:08PM +0200, Andre Klärner wrote:
> Actually the manual specifies this pretty nicely:
>
> == the fine manual, chapter 3.11:
> Many users receive e-mail under a number of different addresses. To fully
> use
> Mutt's features here, the program must be able to recogn
* Ulrich Lauther [04-08-14 13:27]:
> On Tue, Apr 08, 2014 at 02:33:08PM +0200, Andre Klärner wrote:
> > Actually the manual specifies this pretty nicely:
> >
> > == the fine manual, chapter 3.11:
> > Many users receive e-mail under a number of different addresses. To fully
> > use
> > Mutt's
On Tue, Apr 08, 2014 at 07:23:31PM +0200, Ulrich Lauther wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 08, 2014 at 02:33:08PM +0200, Andre Klärner wrote:
> > Actually the manual specifies this pretty nicely:
> >
> > == the fine manual, chapter 3.11:
> > Many users receive e-mail under a number of different addresses. To
I recently changed the incoming and outgoing email setting as per Verizon's
request to use SSL. I have gotten the incoming mail to work, but can't get the
outgoing to work. It says it is trying to connect to smtp.verizon.net, and it
waits for a long time then fianlly it says sending in the ba
* russurquha...@verizon.net [04-08-14 15:33]:
> I recently changed the incoming and outgoing email setting as per
> Verizon's request to use SSL. I have gotten the incoming mail to work,
> but can't get the outgoing to work. It says it is trying to connect to
> smtp.verizon.net, and it waits
On Tue, Apr 08, 2014 at 02:33:08PM +0200, Andre Klärner wrote:
>
> Actually the manual specifies this pretty nicely:
>
> == the fine manual, chapter 3.11:
> Many users receive e-mail under a number of different addresses. To fully
> use
> Mutt's features here, the program must be able to rec
* Ulrich Lauther [04-08-14 19:08]:
> On Tue, Apr 08, 2014 at 02:33:08PM +0200, Andre Klärner wrote:
> >
> > Actually the manual specifies this pretty nicely:
> >
> > == the fine manual, chapter 3.11:
> > Many users receive e-mail under a number of different addresses. To
> > fully use Mutt's
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