On Sun, Apr 05, 2020 at 08:39:34AM +0200, steve wrote:
I can display images, read pdf's, etc??? but one thing I never managed to do is
open an html file containing images. I mean, I can send the html part to
firefox but the images don't follow.
With neomutt on Debian 9, ":exec bounce-message" f
On Sat, Apr 04, 2020 at 07:18:42PM +0200, steve wrote:
> I can display images, read pdf's, etc… but one thing I never managed
> to do is open an html file containing images. I mean, I can send the
> html part to firefox but the images don't follow.
>
> How do you guys cope with that?
Depends what
On Sun, Apr 05, 2020 at 10:47:56AM +1000, raf wrote:
> For other document attachments, I use various mailcap
> filters to render things as text such as catdoc,
> xls2csv, mutt.octet.filter and mutt.vcard.filter by
> David A Pearson, vcalendar-filter by Martyn Smith etc.
I knew about some of those,
On Sat, Apr 04, 2020 at 09:06:13AM -0700, Felix Finch wrote:
> On 20200404, Sam Kuper wrote:
>>This ~/.mailcap works tolerably under Gnome [...]
>
> I've been using something similar for several years, and one thing
> missing from this is a way to respond to invites. Perhaps it's an
> Outlook-onl
On 20200405, Sam Kuper wrote:
On Sat, Apr 04, 2020 at 09:06:13AM -0700, Felix Finch wrote:
On 20200404, Sam Kuper wrote:
This ~/.mailcap works tolerably under Gnome [...]
I've been using something similar for several years, and one thing
missing from this is a way to respond to in
On Sun, Apr 05, 2020 at 08:18:09AM +0200, Mike wrote:
When replying to one of those mails in that folder I like to set my
From like the To of the mail I'm replying to.
Is there a special solution for this?
Check out $reverse_name and $reverse_realname.
--
Kevin J. McCarthy
GPG Fingerprint: 8
On 05.04. I wrote:
> I have multiple mail addresses and some received mails are directed
> to a certain folder.
>
> When replying to one of those mails in that folder I like to set my
> >From like the To of the mail I'm replying to.
reverse_name and reverse_realname did it.
On 2020-04-04, Vegard Svanberg wrote:
> However, I'm increasingly finding myself having to resort to various
> tricks to deal with HTML only emails (with picture attachments),
> calendar invites, and other oddities and awkward stuff people send.
I hever had that much trouble _reading_ HTML email
Propagating the notion that E-Mail and Calendar are separate things is
probably the best thing to do, to undo their evil marriage. The calendar
related RFC's that I have looked at indicate that the protocols were
designed work and communicate completely independent of E-Mail, yet the
majority of
Felix Finch writes:
> On 20200405, Sam Kuper wrote:
> > In the meantime, you can just reply to the message (which, after all,
> > was sent as an email): "Thanks, I accept your invitation to the meeting
> > at 5pm PDT on 5th May 2020."
>
> Now that's an
On 20200405, Akkana Peck wrote:
Is there any way to configure mutt to alert me at the top of the
message if there are any text/calendar or image/* attachments
anywhere in the message, even as part of a multipart/alternative?
I feel like I miss a lot in mail messages because mutt doesn't te
On Sun, Apr 05, 2020 at 08:05:29AM -0700, m...@amrx.net wrote:
> Truly, sending the human an E-Mail, to read, is a great response, but
> could trigger a frustrating conversation about auto populating
> calendar items, be prepared to defend your mutt way of life.
Been there, done that. Several tim
On Sun, Apr 05, 2020 at 12:19:58PM -0600, Akkana Peck wrote:
This happens for two reasons:
1. Mutt shows attachments at the bottom of a message, which was
reasonable in the days before everyone top-posted; but now I never
2. Calendar invites are often part of a MIME multipart/alternative:
I feel
No! The ultimate goal should be do accept calendar invitations from your
calendar!
Your mail client is reserved for reading email. MIME attached ics files
to coordinate meeting attendance is an atrocity.
On Sun, Apr 05, 2020 at 08:48:35PM +0100, Sam Kuper wrote:
> On Sun, Apr 05, 2020 at 08:05:2
On Sun, Apr 05, 2020 at 12:45:09PM -0700, Felix Finch wrote:
> On 20200405, Akkana Peck wrote:
> >Is there any way to configure mutt to alert me at the top of the
> >message if there are any text/calendar or image/* attachments
> >anywhere in the message, even as part of a
On Sun, Apr 05, 2020 at 01:08:05PM -0700, m...@amrx.net wrote:
> On Sun, Apr 05, 2020 at 08:48:35PM +0100, Sam Kuper wrote:
>> If/when it becomes possible to RSVP, in a machine-readable fashion
>> directly from Mutt, to calendar-invites-sent-via-email, I'll switch
>> to that.
>
> No! The ultimate
On Sun, Apr 05, 2020 at 04:43:20PM -0400, Fred Smith wrote:
> On Sun, Apr 05, 2020 at 12:45:09PM -0700, Felix Finch wrote:
>> On 20200405, Akkana Peck wrote:
>> >Is there any way to configure mutt to alert me at the top of the
>> >message if there are any text/cale
On 20200405, Fred Smith wrote:
On Sun, Apr 05, 2020 at 12:45:09PM -0700, Felix Finch wrote:
On 20200405, Akkana Peck wrote:
>Is there any way to configure mutt to alert me at the top of the
>message if there are any text/calendar or image/* attachments
>anywhere in the message, even a
On 20200405, m...@amrx.net wrote:
No! The ultimate goal should be do accept calendar invitations from your
calendar!
Your mail client is reserved for reading email. MIME attached ics files
to coordinate meeting attendance is an atrocity.
Not even the email client is that restricted. It is
I realize this isn't an answer to Vegard Svanberg's original question,
but I think it's a point worth raising: isn't the fact that mutt is
text-based a security feature?
Thunderbird, which I consider the second-best e-mail client, does have
security settings to prevent it from automatically loadin
On 20200405, Greg Marks wrote:
I realize this isn't an answer to Vegard Svanberg's original question,
but I think it's a point worth raising: isn't the fact that mutt is
text-based a security feature?
I have always used that as an excuse when corporate drones get annoyed
Akkana Peck wrote:
> Felix Finch writes:
> > On 20200405, Sam Kuper wrote:
> > > In the meantime, you can just reply to the message (which, after all,
> > > was sent as an email): "Thanks, I accept your invitation to the meeting
> > > at 5pm PDT on 5th
22 matches
Mail list logo