peasth...@shaw.ca wrote: > A third case is when I am at work and the tunnel between dalton
You have a complicated setup! > and joule is broken. Then POP3 can bring messages from the ISP > through the public Internet to cantor; but the ISP will not accept > a message from cantor via SMTP through the public Internet. In > this case messages must be sent through the Web interface of the ISP. > Presumeably it's this Web software which inserts " (#)". Now if a > message is read on cantor I have difficulty. That is not very nice of them. It is good that your tunnel is back working again so that you can avoid some of the problems. > The message-id is visible on cantor but I do not know of any way to > have the Web interface accept an In-reply-to parameter. That's when > a new thread begins. It must be more than this because the Subject line is also modified. Not having an In-Reply-To isn't changing the subject line. (shrug) > If the tunnel is broken I could simply refrain from retrieving mail to > the MUA on cantor and read all mail with the Web based interface. It wasn't the end of the world. It was just annoying and so I noted it. > Is threading of messages in Debian lists explained anywhere? I've never > seen an explanation. A few years ago I found how to use Message-id > and In-reply-to by exploration rather than straightforward reading. Standard email headers apply. RFC 2822 would cover them. Though perhaps the wikipedia page is more readable. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email#Message_header Bob
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