Tim Lee <progscriptcl...@gmail.com> wrote: > Yes, that is correct.
>> I've been an MH user going on 33yrs. > I'm curious: what did people commonly use for reading mail when MH was > just invented? Was it the Unix "mail" program? So, the complexity of multiple accounts has nothing to do with incoming email. The complexity is that since SPF records ~15 years ago, it now important that you send email via the correct MTA. Incoming email from multiple accounts is either run inc multiple times, or use fetchmail, or set up .forward files (least disreable now due to spam filters). Prior to that, you just used your local SMTP relay. You put whatever made sense into the From: via some mechanism, and SMTP just coped. (I've done this via replcomps at some point, where I picked the From to always be whomever was involved. If I was emailing j...@example.com, and I was also m...@example.com, then I'd use that. At some point, I think it broke, and I never debugged it) But that doesn't work anymore unless you control the DNS for all zones in question, and can set up SPF correctly. (Mostly, that actually does apply to me) I'm sure that there is a way to configure postfix (or maybe exim) to punt to different submit ports based upon From: value, but probably the best way is to just use different nmh configurations. > I understand that this ensures that the accounts stay separate, but > managing multiple user accounts is not exactly light work. I guess the > use of separate UNIX accounts may be appropriate for particular use > cases, but I do not need such a strict separation at the moment. I think it's probably excessive, given the desire to be able to do things like click on links and have them open via X-windows in your browser. I use mh-e.el, with Emacs, and I have a series of identies that I can pick with the mouse, but mostly, I do via M-x ietf,or M-x credil, etc. Happy to share all of that. -- ] Never tell me the odds! | ipv6 mesh networks [ ] Michael Richardson, Sandelman Software Works | IoT architect [ ] m...@sandelman.ca http://www.sandelman.ca/ | ruby on rails [
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