ould not expect it
> from Google.
>
> A tool to debug issues is "openssl s_client"
>
> > - View a log. May be there is a log in Thunderbird or in systemd, and I
> > can identify that issue, found certificate that blamed.
>
> Thunderbird has console [Ctrl+Shift
in (browser on administrator's computer acquired it from
other site, so they are unaware of the issue), but I would not expect it
from Google.
A tool to debug issues is "openssl s_client"
- View a log. May be there is a log in Thunderbird or in systemd, and I
can identify that issue,
On Sat, Dec 14, 2024 at 02:09:30PM +0700, Dima wrote:
> Hello!
>
> My system:
> Debain: Debian GNU/Linux 12 (bookworm) x86_64
> Thunderbird: Thunderbird 128.4.3esr
> Using VPN via SOCK5
>
> Got a message notification pop-up "Certificate for imap.google.com does not
&
On Sat, Dec 14, 2024 at 02:09:30PM +0700, Dima wrote:
> Hello!
>
> My system:
> Debain: Debian GNU/Linux 12 (bookworm) x86_64
> Thunderbird: Thunderbird 128.4.3esr
> Using VPN via SOCK5
>
> Got a message notification pop-up "Certificate for imap.google.com does not
&
Hello!
My system:
Debain: Debian GNU/Linux 12 (bookworm) x86_64
Thunderbird: Thunderbird 128.4.3esr
Using VPN via SOCK5
Got a message notification pop-up "Certificate for imap.google.com does
not come from the trusted source." with a button "activate".
I did not press the
Hi,
Just a warning. Thunderbird-128.4.0 have arrived to bookworm
https://lists.debian.org/debian-security-announce/2024/msg00217.html
[DSA 5803-1] thunderbird security update
Support for the
115.x series has ended, so starting with this update we're now
following the 128.x series.
Ho
Dear list,
I am encountering an unusual issue where Thunderbird is incorrectly accessing my
"Messagerie" folder.
While there are no visible errors within Thunderbird,
Dovecot logs reveal several permission-denied messages linked to the folder
structure.
Sep 29 16:45:20 im
Am 21.06.2024 um 13:57:11 Uhr schrieb CHRIS M:
> And I like how for POP3 accounts, each email is stored as an
> individual file, vs being shoved into a binary .mbx file that could
> get corrupted at any time!
This is possible for IMAP too, e.g. with the Maildir format.
--
Gruß
Marco
Send unso
On Wednesday 19 June 2024 04:00:44 pm Cindy Sue Causey wrote:
> My brain keeps wanting to note that e.g. Gmail used to make us jump
> through painful hoops to use desktop programs like Evolution. That
> didn't happen for me this time, but maybe other email providers still
> have the detail that
in but then
>
> a box pops up indicating that there was an error trying to login and
> asks for the password, which I supply and box closes only to return
> shortly with the same response.
> I have used the account on my other system and no problem so the
> account is OK.
>
the password, which I supply and box closes only to return
shortly with the same response.
I have used the account on my other system and no problem so the account
is OK.
I tried to download Thunderbird to give it a try but it is missing some
dependencies an will not
load.
--
Jerry Mellon
On 2024-06-03, Chris M wrote:
>
> Thunderbird is the name of a cheap wine?
>
A mutt is a mongrel dog, if that adds anything to the conversation.
ied. I'm particularly irritated with those that
> > have no way to disable HTML rendering, and those that have no way
> > to send properly formatted plain-text-only emails, those that try
> > to trick you into top-posting
>
> When I read this first time I decid
On Mon 03 Jun 2024 at 14:08:46 (-0500), Chris M wrote:
> I am needing a "refresher course" on mail clients that use the .mbox
> format to store emails.
> It's been years since I've used this kind of mail client.
>
> Is there any "dangers" I need to know about? Like, keeping the mailbox
> a certain
ring, and those that have no way to send properly formatted
plain-text-only emails, those that try to trick you into top-posting
When I read this first time I decided that the complains applies to
thunderbird as well. In thunderbird it is configurable. However I admit
that some complications may
On Mon, 3 Jun 2024 15:25:12 -0400
e...@gmx.us wrote:
> The USAF Thunderbirds predate Gallo Thunderbird by at least a year.
> They were founded in 1953, and the law allowing Gallo Thunderbird's
> creation wasn't passed until the next year. The wine was certainly
>
stration team, after that same cheap wine)
> >
> > The USAF Thunderbirds predate Gallo Thunderbird by at least a year. They
> > were founded in 1953, and the law allowing Gallo Thunderbird's creation
> > wasn't passed until the next year. The wine was certainly out by
USAF Thunderbirds predate Gallo Thunderbird by at least a year.
They were founded in 1953, and the law allowing Gallo Thunderbird's
creation wasn't passed until the next year. The wine was certainly out
by 1957. The Ford Thunderbird _might_ predate the wine, since it came
out in 1955. T
debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
Chris M wrote:
I love Evolution and Claws to a point. Its a PITA to forward emails
with HTML in them, like the Informed Delivery email I get each morning
letting us know whats coming in the USPS that day.
Claws forwards mails with a text/html part just fine. W
On 6/3/24 15:45, Bret Busby wrote:
On 4/6/24 03:25, e...@gmx.us wrote:
On 6/3/24 12:10, James H. H. Lampert wrote:
(who still hasn't figured out why Ford named a car, and the Air Force
named its demonstration team, after that same cheap wine)
The USAF Thunderbirds predate Gallo Thunde
Chris M wrote:
> I love Evolution and Claws to a point. Its a PITA to forward emails
> with HTML in them, like the Informed Delivery email I get each morning
> letting us know whats coming in the USPS that day.
Claws forwards mails with a text/html part just fine. What's your actual
problem with
On 4/6/24 03:25, e...@gmx.us wrote:
On 6/3/24 12:10, James H. H. Lampert wrote:
(who still hasn't figured out why Ford named a car, and the Air Force
named
its demonstration team, after that same cheap wine)
The USAF Thunderbirds predate Gallo Thunderbird by at least a year. They
On 6/3/24 12:10, James H. H. Lampert wrote:
(who still hasn't figured out why Ford named a car, and the Air Force named
its demonstration team, after that same cheap wine)
The USAF Thunderbirds predate Gallo Thunderbird by at least a year. They
were founded in 1953, and the law allowing
I am needing a "refresher course" on mail clients that use the .mbox
format to store emails.
It's been years since I've used this kind of mail client.
Is there any "dangers" I need to know about? Like, keeping the mailbox a
certain size?
or a certain amount of emails per folder etc?
The last
ocessor resources by insisting on checking your email even
when closed.
Compared to that, dealing with T-Bird's imperfections is a walk in the
park.
--
JHHL
(who still hasn't figured out why Ford named a car, and the Air Force
named its demonstration team, after that same cheap wine)
Bret Busby wrote:
> On 4/6/24 00:10, James H. H. Lampert wrote:
> > I will say that one should probably not expect perfection from an email
> > reader that's named after a cheap wine.
> >
>
> ?
USA-centric reference. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flavored_fortified_wine
-dsr-
On Mon, Jun 3, 2024 at 2:14 PM Bret Busby wrote:
>
> On 4/6/24 00:10, James H. H. Lampert wrote:
> > I will say that one should probably not expect perfection from an email
> > reader that's named after a cheap wine.
>
> ?
Thunderbird wine was extremely inexpensive an
On 4/6/24 00:10, James H. H. Lampert wrote:
I will say that one should probably not expect perfection from an email
reader that's named after a cheap wine.
?
Bret Busby
Armadale
Western Australia
(UTC+0800)
.
I will say that one should probably not expect perfection from an email
reader that's named after a cheap wine.
In my experience, T-Bird is the worst email reader I've ever used . . .
except for *every other* email reader (without a single exception) I've
tried. I'm particularly irritated with
Bret Busby wrote:
On 3/6/24 04:14, Chris M wrote:
Felix Miata wrote:
It might be worth checking what language the emails are in. Thunderbird
allows you to specify fonts separately for each writing system (e.g. if
you want to specify fonts for Japanese or Greek or Khmer messages, you
can do
Bret Busby wrote:
Hello, Chris.
We appear to be 13 hours ahead of you (see my signature), so, the time
here, is now about 0430. I am a creature of the night.
OH man, 4:30 AM! That's way too early for me!
Andika? Search for it in Synaptic...
:)
I am not sure whether ap
On 3/6/24 04:14, Chris M wrote:
Felix Miata wrote:
It might be worth checking what language the emails are in. Thunderbird
allows you to specify fonts separately for each writing system (e.g. if
you want to specify fonts for Japanese or Greek or Khmer messages, you
can do). For English and
On 3/6/24 03:56, Chris M wrote:
Bret Busby wrote:
Whilst, at groups.io, two different Tbird email users lists exist; one
for blind people, and, the other, for those of us who still have
sufficient sight, and, these messages about Tbird, should, more
properly, be directed to the Tbird users l
Felix Miata wrote:
It might be worth checking what language the emails are in. Thunderbird
allows you to specify fonts separately for each writing system (e.g. if
you want to specify fonts for Japanese or Greek or Khmer messages, you
can do). For English and comparable languages, you want to
Bret Busby wrote:
For
Language
Choose the languages used to display menus, messages, and
notifications from Thunderbird.
I have set English (GB) which, I expect, will confound anything that
tries to impose characters that are not what I want.
Bret Busby
Armadale
Western Australia
Darac Marjal wrote:
It might be worth checking what language the emails are in.
Thunderbird allows you to specify fonts separately for each writing
system (e.g. if you want to specify fonts for Japanese or Greek or
Khmer messages, you can do). For English and comparable languages, you
want to
Bret Busby wrote:
Whilst, at groups.io, two different Tbird email users lists exist; one
for blind people, and, the other, for those of us who still have
sufficient sight, and, these messages about Tbird, should, more
properly, be directed to the Tbird users lists, try the following.
In the
UPDATE:
I might of found a solution to my problem:
I somehow stumbled across:
https://addons.thunderbird.net/en-US/seamonkey/addon/no-small-text/?src=search
Then launched Seamonkey browser and set the " NO SMALL TEXT" settings to:
https://imgur.com/a/DvJaTeG
If you're in the US scroll down
he text a little bigger without
>> having to use CTRL ++ on those certain emails.
>> Any ideas on how?
> It might be worth checking what language the emails are in. Thunderbird
> allows you to specify fonts separately for each writing system (e.g. if
> you want to specify fonts fo
having to use CTRL ++ on those certain emails.
Any ideas on how?
It might be worth checking what language the emails are in. Thunderbird
allows you to specify fonts separately for each writing system (e.g. if
you want to specify fonts for Japanese or Greek or Khmer messages, you
can do). For E
ain emails.
Any ideas on how?
It might be worth checking what language the emails are in. Thunderbird
allows you to specify fonts separately for each writing system (e.g. if
you want to specify fonts for Japanese or Greek or Khmer messages, you
can do). For English and comparable languages, you w
On 3/6/24 02:47, Bret Busby wrote:
On 3/6/24 02:31, e...@gmx.us wrote:
On 6/2/24 14:03, Chris M wrote:
I noticed that in SeaMonkey Mail's latest version 2.53.18.2 that the
text
is small in SOME emails, and in some emails its fine. And I can't figure
out what to change to make the text a little
On 3/6/24 02:31, e...@gmx.us wrote:
On 6/2/24 14:03, Chris M wrote:
I noticed that in SeaMonkey Mail's latest version 2.53.18.2 that the text
is small in SOME emails, and in some emails its fine. And I can't figure
out what to change to make the text a little bigger without having to use
CTRL ++
On 6/2/24 14:03, Chris M wrote:
I noticed that in SeaMonkey Mail's latest version 2.53.18.2 that the text
is small in SOME emails, and in some emails its fine. And I can't figure
out what to change to make the text a little bigger without having to use
CTRL ++ on those certain emails.
Any ideas
I noticed that in SeaMonkey Mail's latest version 2.53.18.2 that the
text is small in SOME emails, and in some emails its fine. And I can't
figure out what to change to make the text a little bigger without
having to use CTRL ++ on those certain emails.
Any ideas on how?
Here is an example:
Paul D Schmitt wrote on 2/14/24 10:49:
After an upgrade of Debian 11 yesterday, Thunderbird 115.7.0 now has an
inbox issue where the listings move making it difficult to save or
delete them! I had this exact issue with Debian based Antix 22 after a
recent upgrade. That problem was resolved by
After an upgrade of Debian 11 yesterday, Thunderbird 115.7.0 now has an
inbox issue where the listings move making it difficult to save or
delete them! I had this exact issue with Debian based Antix 22 after a
recent upgrade. That problem was resolved by a subsequent upgrade from
Thunderbird.
On 16/01/2024 12:36, David Christensen wrote:
My Debian, Thunderbird, and message filters are working very well. :-)
My experience is that enough garbage appears in thunderbird profiles
after several years of usage. Unsubscribed NNTP groups, IMAP caches that
thunderbird considered corrupted
On 1/15/24 18:32, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 16/01/2024 04:19, David Christensen wrote:
$ ll -1 .thunderbird/dpchrist/*/*/msgFilterRules.dat
-rw-r--r-- 1 dpchrist dpchrist 25 2024-01-15 12:50:34
.thunderbird/dpchrist/ImapMail/november.he-1.net/msgFilterRules.dat
-rw-r--r-- 1 dpchrist dpchrist
On 16/01/2024 04:19, David Christensen wrote:
$ ll -1 .thunderbird/dpchrist/*/*/msgFilterRules.dat
-rw-r--r-- 1 dpchrist dpchrist 25 2024-01-15 12:50:34
.thunderbird/dpchrist/ImapMail/november.he-1.net/msgFilterRules.dat
-rw-r--r-- 1 dpchrist dpchrist 1011 2024-01-15 13:07:32
.thunderbird
On 1/15/24 06:08, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 15/01/2024 08:25, David Christensen wrote:
/home/dpchrist/.thunderbird/dpchrist/ImapMail/november.he-3.net/msgFilterRules.dat
/home/dpchrist/.thunderbird/dpchrist/ImapMail/november.he-2.net/msgFilterRules.dat
/home/dpchrist/.thunderbird/dpchrist/ImapMail
On 15/01/2024 08:25, David Christensen wrote:
/home/dpchrist/.thunderbird/dpchrist/ImapMail/november.he-3.net/msgFilterRules.dat
/home/dpchrist/.thunderbird/dpchrist/ImapMail/november.he-2.net/msgFilterRules.dat
/home/dpchrist/.thunderbird/dpchrist/ImapMail/november.he-1.net/msgFilterRules.dat
/.thunderbird/profilename/Mail/smtp-name/msgFilterRules.dat
Mozilla profiles located in other locations are supported. They need not be
anywhere in /home/ if properly configured and permissioned.
I generally stay away from Gene threads, because they lead to nowhere,
but I found out that in the same
cd
./fonts/conf.d/11-lcdfilter-default.conf
./xdg/kshorturifilterrc
./alternatives/bogofilter
./bogofilter.cf
./apache2/mods-enabled/filter.load
./apache2/mods-available/filter.load
./apache2/mods-available/ext_filter.load
./modules-load.d/cups-filters.conf
gene@coyote:/etc$
I don't see anything
On 1/14/24 08:13, David Wright wrote:
On Sun 14 Jan 2024 at 01:57:59 (-0800), David Christensen wrote:
On 1/12/24 18:17, gene heskett wrote:
On 1/12/24 15:58, David Christensen wrote:
Searching for the Thunderbird message filter configuration
files on my computer:
2024-01-12 12:31:57
On 1/14/24 17:27, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sun, Jan 14, 2024 at 05:00:09PM -0500, gene heskett wrote:
On 1/14/24 11:10, Arno Lehmann wrote:
Gene,
Am 14.01.2024 um 16:56 schrieb gene heskett:
On 1/14/24 04:58, David Christensen wrote:
find . -xdev -iname '*filter*'
gene@coyote:/etc$ sudo find
t; >
> > > > > Searching for the Thunderbird message filter configuration
> > > > > files on my computer:
> > > > >
> > > > > 2024-01-12 12:31:57 dpchrist@taz ~
> > > > > $ find .thunderbird/dpchrist -iname '*fil
Am 14.01.2024 um 23:00 schrieb gene heskett:
On 1/14/24 11:10, Arno Lehmann wrote:
Gene,
Am 14.01.2024 um 16:56 schrieb gene heskett:
On 1/14/24 04:58, David Christensen wrote:
find . -xdev -iname '*filter*'
gene@coyote:/etc$ sudo find . -xdev -iname '*filter*'
why sudo, and why in /etc ?
gene heskett composed on 2024-01-14 17:11 (UTC-0500):
> David Wright wrote:
>>Let’s go over the steps you need to follow to create Thunderbird rules
>> that move messages from a specific sender to a folder:
> Most of the "filters" I use (and there are well over
On Sun, Jan 14, 2024 at 05:00:09PM -0500, gene heskett wrote:
> On 1/14/24 11:10, Arno Lehmann wrote:
> > Gene,
> >
> > Am 14.01.2024 um 16:56 schrieb gene heskett:
> > > On 1/14/24 04:58, David Christensen wrote:
> > > > find . -xdev -iname '*filter*'
> > > gene@coyote:/etc$ sudo find . -xdev -in
On 1/14/24 11:45, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 13/01/2024 09:17, gene heskett wrote:
Go to Thunderbird -> Edit -> Account Settings -> ghesk...@shentel.net
-> Server Settings. What is the value of the field "Server Type"?
IMAP MAIL Server
There is a little chance that mes
On 1/14/24 11:13, David Wright wrote:
On Sun 14 Jan 2024 at 01:57:59 (-0800), David Christensen wrote:
On 1/12/24 18:17, gene heskett wrote:
On 1/12/24 15:58, David Christensen wrote:
Searching for the Thunderbird message filter configuration
files on my computer:
2024-01-12 12:31:57
On 1/14/24 11:10, Arno Lehmann wrote:
Gene,
Am 14.01.2024 um 16:56 schrieb gene heskett:
On 1/14/24 04:58, David Christensen wrote:
find . -xdev -iname '*filter*'
gene@coyote:/etc$ sudo find . -xdev -iname '*filter*'
why sudo, and why in /etc ?
/etc only because I was there and sudo to get
On 13/01/2024 09:17, gene heskett wrote:
Go to Thunderbird -> Edit -> Account Settings -> ghesk...@shentel.net
-> Server Settings. What is the value of the field "Server Type"?
IMAP MAIL Server
There is a little chance that messages are still on the server. Set
On Sun 14 Jan 2024 at 01:57:59 (-0800), David Christensen wrote:
> On 1/12/24 18:17, gene heskett wrote:
> > On 1/12/24 15:58, David Christensen wrote:
> > > Searching for the Thunderbird message filter configuration
> > > files on my computer:
> > >
&g
Gene,
Am 14.01.2024 um 16:56 schrieb gene heskett:
On 1/14/24 04:58, David Christensen wrote:
find . -xdev -iname '*filter*'
gene@coyote:/etc$ sudo find . -xdev -iname '*filter*'
why sudo, and why in /etc ?
Cheers,
Arno
--
Arno Lehmann
IT-Service Lehmann
Sandstr. 6, 49080 Osnabrück
r-default.conf
./xdg/kshorturifilterrc
./alternatives/bogofilter
./bogofilter.cf
./apache2/mods-enabled/filter.load
./apache2/mods-available/filter.load
./apache2/mods-available/ext_filter.load
./modules-load.d/cups-filters.conf
gene@coyote:/etc$
I don't see anything thunderbird there. I have some macular d
On 1/12/24 18:17, gene heskett wrote:
On 1/12/24 15:58, David Christensen wrote:
Go to Thunderbird -> Edit -> Account Settings -> ghesk...@shentel.net
-> Server Settings. What is the value of the field "Server Type"?
IMAP MAIL Server
Okay.
Please run the follo
he actual filter and actions you configured
before anybopdy can develop any clue.
Also, adding the actual version of thunderbird will be useful.
115.6.0 (64-bit)
And it may be relevant to have the account type, too -- pop3, imap,
whatever server side, and how your local mail storage is orga
before anybopdy can develop any clue.
Also, adding the actual version of thunderbird will be useful.
And it may be relevant to have the account type, too -- pop3, imap,
whatever server side, and how your local mail storage is organized.
Until this bug is resolved, I suggest:
1. Shut down t
lop any clue.
Also, adding the actual version of thunderbird will be useful.
And it may be relevant to have the account type, too -- pop3, imap,
whatever server side, and how your local mail storage is organized.
Cheers,
Arno
Thanks.
Cheers, Gene Heskett.
--
Arno Lehmann
IT-Service Lehma
On Sat 18 Nov 2023 at 08:58:41 (-0800), Peter Ehlert wrote:
> thread back from the dead:
> first, thanks for all of the input and wise suggestions
>
> I am going crazy with Thunderbird, and Claws too.
> Now Claws has a calendar add-on, did not try it but maybe it will suffice.
&
On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 10:15:56 -0600
Mike McClain wrote:
Hello Mike,
>A second item that's slightly off topic, I've had no luck setting
>up claws-mail to send out through frontier.net and if anyone knows how
>to do that I'd appreciate the claws-mail setup for it.
Without knowing what you've d
On Monday 20 November 2023 11:15:56 am Mike McClain wrote:
> Seeing several messages complaining about fetching messages from
> gmail.com I'd like to point out that gmail can be set to forward all
> messages to a gmail account to another account on a different server.
That's exactly what I'm doin
On Mon, 2023-11-20 at 10:15 -0600, Mike McClain wrote:
> Seeing several messages complaining about fetching messages from
> gmail.com I'd like to point out that gmail can be set to forward all
> messages to a gmail account to another account on a different server.
> I saw a message making t
Seeing several messages complaining about fetching messages from
gmail.com I'd like to point out that gmail can be set to forward all
messages to a gmail account to another account on a different server.
I saw a message making that point several years ago, probably here,
and seldom log into
On 19/11/2023 17:50, Tixy wrote:
On Sun, 2023-11-19 at 07:58 -0800, Peter Ehlert wrote:
Question: with IMAP is it feasible for a mail client to Leave
messages
on the server?
My question was incomplete. I should have added that I must have
local
copies of almost everything, for Me to filter an
On Sun, 2023-11-19 at 07:58 -0800, Peter Ehlert wrote:
> > Question: with IMAP is it feasible for a mail client to Leave
> > messages
> > on the server?
> My question was incomplete. I should have added that I must have
> local
> copies of almost everything, for Me to filter an purge.
> --- > So
On 11/18/23 08:58, Peter Ehlert wrote:
thread back from the dead:
first, thanks for all of the input and wise suggestions
I am going crazy with Thunderbird, and Claws too.
Now Claws has a calendar add-on, did not try it but maybe it will
suffice.
My longtime web and email host support have
.
I will message their support and help them correct their error.
thanks for listening.
Peter Ehlert
On 11/18/23 09:06, peter ehlert wrote:
damn! I forgot... not able to receive on my POP mail accounts!
now using the hateful Gmail...
maybe that's why Thunderbird can't use a mailing l
On Sun, 19 Nov 2023 11:57:03 +
Joe wrote:
Hello Joe,
>On Sat, 18 Nov 2023 19:31:31 +
>Brad Rogers wrote:
>> Can be altered in Prefs.
>> Display; Summaries Message list tab "Mark message as read" section.
>Thank you. I never told it to do that.
I think (but don't quote me) it's the def
On Sat, 18 Nov 2023 19:20:49 +
Joe wrote:
Hello Joe,
>currently, selecting an email in the list marks it as read, which is not
Can be altered in Prefs.
Display; Summaries Message list tab "Mark message as read" section.
--
Regards _ "Valid sig separator is {dash}{dash}{space}"
On Sun 19 Nov 2023 at 04:29:57 (+), Tim Woodall wrote:
> On Sat, 18 Nov 2023, Joe wrote:
>
> > If this area is likely to be the issue, try telnet to the IMAP server
> > using port 143, you should get back a list of capabilities which may
> > help. Oddly, though I'm using port 993 to my local s
On Sat, 18 Nov 2023, Joe wrote:
If this area is likely to be the issue, try telnet to the IMAP server
using port 143, you should get back a list of capabilities which may
help. Oddly, though I'm using port 993 to my local server, it does not
return any information from that port, only on 143. Pr
On 19/11/23 08:04, jeremy ardley wrote:
On 19/11/23 01:59, Alex wrote:
IMAP clients will therefore keep messages on the IMAP server and not
delete them unless you specifically tell them to, for example via
right-click -> delete.
A client can also alter messages retained on a server or ev
On 19/11/23 01:59, Alex wrote:
IMAP clients will therefore keep messages on the IMAP server and not
delete them unless you specifically tell them to, for example via
right-click -> delete.
A client can also alter messages retained on a server or event insert
new messages. This is interest
On Sat, 18 Nov 2023 19:20:49 +
Joe wrote:
> Claws cannot compose HTML emails, which may be a showstopper for you.
> It can display HTML, though I always use plain text. If I really need
> to see HTML, such as when an unsubscribe link is buried in 100K of
> useless markup, I use a webmail clie
On Sat, 18 Nov 2023 08:58:41 -0800
Peter Ehlert wrote:
> thread back from the dead:
> first, thanks for all of the input and wise suggestions
>
> I am going crazy with Thunderbird, and Claws too.
> Now Claws has a calendar add-on, did not try it but maybe it will
> suffice.
&g
On Sat, 18 Nov 2023 08:58:41 -0800
Peter Ehlert wrote:
> Question: with IMAP is it feasible for a mail client to Leave
> messages on the server?
That's why IMAP exists to begin with. IMAP was made to make it possible
for multiple clients to manage the same mailbox[1].
IMAP clients will therefor
damn! I forgot... not able to receive on my POP mail accounts!
now using the hateful Gmail...
maybe that's why Thunderbird can't use a mailing list, they don't trust
their own email app. Eff Them!
On 11/18/23 08:58, Peter Ehlert wrote:
thread back from the dead:
first, thanks
thread back from the dead:
first, thanks for all of the input and wise suggestions
I am going crazy with Thunderbird, and Claws too.
Now Claws has a calendar add-on, did not try it but maybe it will suffice.
My longtime web and email host support have been struggling to help me,
Kudos to
Hi,
On 15.08.23 21:48, Russell L. Harris wrote:
Consider evolution.
Tried it. Used >6GB RAM.
.f
OpenPGP_signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
On 19/8/23 21:49, Peter Ehlert wrote:
Claws mail has an official users mailing list, which, I believe, is
hosted and administered by the application developer, who also answers
queries on the list.
Thunderbird email has no official users mailing list, but has two
unofficial users
On 8/15/23 19:20, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 15/08/2023 23:43, Peter Ehlert wrote:
I am a long time user of Thunderbird. No real complaints, but the GUI
has been slowly been changed.
I think, Thunderbird will be upgraded to version 115 soon in Debian
stable. Major changes of default UI have
On 8/15/23 12:13, Bret Busby wrote:
On 16/8/23 00:43, Peter Ehlert wrote:
I am a long time user of Thunderbird. No real complaints, but the GUI
has been slowly been changed.
lately I have been struggling with that, trying to get it to be My
Way. Minor success.
also the .msf files have
On Wed, 16 Aug 2023 08:58:25 +0200
Thierry Leurent wrote:
Hello Thierry,
>Thanks for the information
YW, Thierry.
Unless one reads the Claws mailing list, it's not easy to have known what
was going on.
--
Regards _ "Valid sig separator is {dash}{dash}{space}"
/ ) "The b
Thanks for the information
On 8/16/23 08:30, Brad Rogers wrote:
On Wed, 16 Aug 2023 00:10:20 +0200
Thierry Leurent wrote:
Hello Thierry,
- Claws mail not render correctly html mails.
It doesn't render them at all, unless you have a suitable plugin
installed(1). And yes, for a while, HTML
On Wed, 16 Aug 2023 00:10:20 +0200
Thierry Leurent wrote:
Hello Thierry,
>- Claws mail not render correctly html mails.
It doesn't render them at all, unless you have a suitable plugin
installed(1). And yes, for a while, HTML rendering was not great. This
was due to removal (in many distros)
On 15/08/2023 23:43, Peter Ehlert wrote:
I am a long time user of Thunderbird. No real complaints, but the GUI
has been slowly been changed.
I think, Thunderbird will be upgraded to version 115 soon in Debian
stable. Major changes of default UI have been announced. I have not
tried it, so I
My last experience with mua is :
- KMail have problem with big imap mailbox.
- Claws mail not render correctly html mails.
- Thunderbird work great.
I'm under kde so I don't try evolution.
On 8/15/23 18:43, Peter Ehlert wrote:
I am a long time user of Thunderbird. No real
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