also sprach Vineet Kumar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2004.02.20.2245 +0100]:
> Have you used mairix? It's an excellent tool.
I have to concur. However, I don't see it solve the challenge I am
facing. I could maintain a file of email addresses of my
correspondents and then have mairix symlink all relevan
Which one? Using Exchange (agreed) or throwing stuff in to database
(would be interesting to hear why).
Timo
[read from here]
I'd like to have an independent software which would do the following:
- Read any IMAP box (also sent messages) and download the contents
- Throw the message data in SQL
also sprach Vineet Kumar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2004.02.20.2245 +0100]:
> Have you used mairix? It's an excellent tool. It generates
> indices from your maildirs which you can then search to form what
> are sometimes called "vfolders" or "search folders". Its search
> options are tailored to mail
also sprach Timo Railo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2004.02.20.2154 +0100]:
> [read from here]
> I'd like to have an independent software which would do the following:
> - Read any IMAP box (also sent messages) and download the contents
> - Throw the message data in SQL database and attachments to disk (wi
* martin f krafft ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [040220 04:22]:
> One of last year's Sysadmin issues (or was it USENIX's ;login:?) had
> an article on mail organisation. The short story was that the guy
> had his mail system configured in such a way to automatically
> maintain a folder hierarchy of correspon
Hi!
[skip this, rambling]
I've been wondering about the same stuff lately. I have some 4
different accounts, abt. 5-10 different addresses and lot's of mail. I
would also like to archive my mail (all mail). "Archiving" just doesn't
work with mbox (or maildir) format. I almost killed a server re
also sprach martin f krafft <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2004.02.20.1306 +0100]:
> One of last year's Sysadmin issues (or was it USENIX's ;login:?) had
> an article on mail organisation. The short story was that the guy
> had his mail system configured in such a way to automatically
> maintain a folder hie
also sprach Kjetil Kjernsmo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2004.02.20.1337 +0100]:
> I remember seeing something like that too, and when I got KDE 3.2
> installed a few days ago on my laptop, I noticed KMail had "Search
> Folders". I just briefly looked at it thinking "oh, so they implemented
> this", had
On Friday 20 February 2004 13:06, martin f krafft wrote:
> One of last year's Sysadmin issues (or was it USENIX's ;login:?) had
> an article on mail organisation. The short story was that the guy
> had his mail system configured in such a way to automatically
> maintain a folder hierarchy of corres
9 matches
Mail list logo