On Thu, 24 Jun 2004 22:38:26 -0700, Daved Daly <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Perhaps you've misunderstood the concept of "Beta". :)
Uh, no. Been on quite a few betas in my time. > If you think it lacks features or doesnt work how it would best suit > you have you botherd to send a "feature request/suggestion/comment" > message to their customer support group? Nope because the problem stems from the very core of how they are doing things. > Personaly, I think GMail is great for viewing mailing lists with, it's > primarily the only application I use it for... since for most other > communication I'd rather send mail from my personal domain name. How so? It is extremely bad for it. I gave it the most simple of tests. 2 lists. That's it. 2 lists. I'm on the same 2 lists elsewhere. In GMail it is a mess and that mess stems from what they are doing. On the traditional client or even another webmail client it isn't as much of a mess. > It's use of Labels is simliar to any other mail application segmenting > messages into different Folders. Granted. But tell me how I can get a clear, concise view of new mail in a reasonable manner using labels. First problem, labels include all archived mail. Of course since they make it so difficult to actually delete mail it means that in less than an hour or two using labels to separate things out is a complete and total mess. There's no clear deliniation between new and old mail. > Tho, their filter rules are adequate but they could use more options, > some of which they are already working on. You'd think they'd just have a simple option of allowing complete headers to be filered on so we could use "List-id: debian-user@" as a filter. Nope. > Their spam filters do require a good bit of training and have a > problem with flagging legitimate messages as spam in the beginning. Quite so. > I'm curious as to why you consider Hotmail as better? Because Hotmail is not taking the tried and true methods of the past and throw them out the window. With Hotmail the basics are covered up front. Folders, check. Filters to get mail into those folders (not great, but hey, it's Hotmail) check, the ability to see at a glance what folders have new mail and be able to find it at a glance, know who its from at a glance and what it's about, check. Those aren't possible with GMail. Great, so this "conversation" consists of Steve, Daved, James, John and Louie. Only one of those is readily identifiable, the rest are rather common names. On my main client, Hotmail and my own Webmail (Squirrelmail) I can at least tell at a glance who it is from, identify relevant and current threads as opposed to "Oh, this one was replied to recently" and, here's the kicker, selectively delete messages. In GMail you either archive (which causes problems), delete whole threads (thereby running the risk of deleting the one or two messages you want to keep) or go through a 5-step process per message to delete it. That's a fundimental and basic problem stemming from their attempt to throw out the tried and true method of reading mail and replace it with something new but ultimately inferior. Great concept, could be better integrated into how things are done instead of trying to foist another screwy way of doing things that will have net vets gnashing their teeth for years to come just like top posting has done. >.< Geh, sorry Daved for the duplicate, forgot to reset the to field on the 2nd edit. Uhm, but the good thing is I forgot one more point. 2 lists. Debian-user and Exim. 1Mb a day. Which means under the flawed archive method this account lasts a little over 2 years. Just slightly less than "forever". Of course this isn't a full mail load and my mail load, outside of debian-user, is actually surprisingly light. My parents, for example, whoa.... not many high-volume lists like d-u but LOTS of moderate volume lists. 1Mb a day is an understatement for them. IE, limited space, no matter what the limit + a fscking difficult way to delete mail effectively = of limited use to all but the most casual user. -- Displaced but never erased. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]