Whenever I see these emails, I was tempted to reply to them with just two words "Who cares" or "So what" :D
There are three ways one can easily overcome this. 1. Be kind to others and stop setting auto-replies when you are on vacation. Seems some people doesn't wanna do this as if they wanna let the whole world know that they are on vacation, which is pathetic :( But I can understand this can happen by mistake, which I think is OK .... 2. Filter out those messages from apache mail server itself, which I don't know how to do. 3. Set my own mail filters, which I have done already. Sometimes it is also annoying when some people put their 10 lines designation as if they think there designation matters in opensource mailing lists. I really feel sorry about them too :) Chinthaka On Wed, Jul 2, 2008 at 6:36 PM, Martin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I literally have about 1000 of these incredibly annoying "Im on vacation" > email messages > Is there any way we can Filter these off so those of us in the REAL world > dont have to deal with this message? > Warm Regards > Martin > Etats Unis/das Amerika > > ----- Original Message ----- > *From:* Mukundan Desikan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > *To:* [email protected] > *Sent:* Tuesday, July 01, 2008 12:49 PM > *Subject:* AUTO: Out of Office until Tuesday 07/25/2008 (returning > 07/25/2008) > > I am out of the office until 07/25/2008. > > I will be out of office until Friday 07/25/2008 .I will have limited access > to emails.Will respond to your emails when i return. > > For any urgent issues related to web services please contact Dharmesh > Bhakta. > > > Note: This is an automated response to your message "*[jira] Commented: > (AXIS2-3883) file handles not being closed after successful call to > webservice"* sent on *7/1/08 6:49:44*. > > This is the only notification you will receive while this person is away. > > -- With Mettha, Eran Chinthaka -------------------------------------------------------------------- Health is the greatest gift; contentment is the greatest wealth; trusting is the best relationship; nirvana is the highest joy. - Dhammapada
