Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-23 Thread David Jonas

On 11/21/2009 06:15 PM, Thomas wrote:


Close TB. Delete your .msf to recreate indexes. Start TB again and let
it re-index (it will take a while). Then everything should be fine. If
not do a bug report.


I submitted a bug report before I saw your post (Tested in TB3.0rc1, 
BuildID=20091121181041):


https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=530551

This seems like a bug to me as multiple people are experiencing it and 
it doesn't go away unless you convince TB to reindex the folder.


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-23 Thread Charles Marcus
On 11/22/2009, Jerry (ges...@yahoo.com) wrote:
> I have read at least two white papers that described Microsoft's support
> for ODF in Office 2010.

Wonder who authored them...

> Both stated that Microsoft's support was more compliant that that in
> Open Office.

I googled:

microsoft odf support 2010 better than openoffice?

and had lots of hits - all saying the exact opposite of what you claim.

> Apparently, OO has been playing fast and loose with its
> implementation for awhile now.

Ridiculous. The biggest issue has been with spreadsheets and the fact
that there was no formal documentation for handling formulas, but that
is remedied with v1.2 of the spec.

> As stated, that is in the still unreleased Office 2010. You can Google
> around for further information. I don't have the URLs in front of me at
> the moment.

I did - nothing whatsoever to support your [false] claim.

There is absolutely ZERO reason for Microsoft to have decent support for
ODF, and 100% reason for them to sabotage it.

But this is totally OT for doveoct now, so I won't reply further on list.


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread vuser1
>
> On Mon, 23 Nov 2009, vus...@test123.ru wrote:
>
>> Outlook is best email client. Even 2003. The only missing thing is 
>> inability to do imap-search request directly to imap server.
>
> I won't say Outlook is the worst email client I've ever seen, but we 
> all know that 'best' and 'Outlook' can only be in one sentence if it 
> is accompanied by 'alternative to'...
Alternatives were: Thunderbird, Evolution, TheBat. Should I try something else? 
I want to write HTML messages easy (use fonts, colors, numbered lists), embed 
screenshot images in emails by simple Print screen - copy buttons, integrate 
email meeting requests with calendar. 

>
> If you are on Windows, have MSOffice, don't need to administer lots 
> of computers, and email in only one US-ASCII or ISO-LATIN1 supported 
> language, then you might want to consider using Outlook. I've seen 
> too many of my clients ordering me to install Outlook and then 
> running in all kinds of trouble. Even as far as some changing to 
> Squirrelmail because that at least enabled them to communicate with 
> their colleagues in Russia etc. So Outlook is an answer only if 
> you're prepared to face the consequences.
Squirrel mail, are you serious? Did you try horde/IMP? Outlook2003 indeed had 
problems with KOI-8/Win1251, but it was long-long time ago. I communicate in 
Russian a lot - no problems in last 3 years, not even one.


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Maarten Bezemer


On Sun, 22 Nov 2009, Jerry wrote:


If you are using a version <2007 then upgrading should be seriously
considered. The "ODF" format in the 2010 version is supposedly more
compliant than that used in OpenOffice.


Rotflmao! You're not serious?? I think you are confusing the Microsoft
OpenXML format with the PDF format. Microsoft's ODF support is pure
CRAP


I have read at least two white papers that described Microsoft's support
for ODF in Office 2010. Both stated that Microsoft's support was more
compliant that that in Open Office. Apparently, OO has been playing
fast and loose with its implementation for awhile now.


Yes and no. Microsoft implemented one of the versions of ODF, and (of 
course) not the versions used in current OOo applications or KDE. For 
example, I remember there was a complete lack of spreadsheet support, and 
Microsoft replied with "because it wasn't in the specs". So yes, you can 
probably open a spreadsheet created by OOo, it just doesn't contain any 
data. An ideal situation for Microsoft, since it enables them to tell 
their customers: "see, we implemented ODF, so we fit your requirements, 
but it doesn't do spreadsheets, and since you need spreadsheets... you 
must use our own .xls or .xlsx format instead." Et voila, the vendor 
lock-in is back in town.


Of course current releases of OOo are using later editions of the 
specification. That's how standards work. Especially since the process of 
getting something promoted to an ISO standard takes quite some time. 
During which time the specs get a lot exposure and the project moves on 
with lots of developers adding new features and refining the specs. With 
software, there is no such thing as sitting back and saying "well, this is 
it, we're done now". Just look at all the different versions of MS Word... 
All .docs are equal, but some are more equal than others.


But.. this is heading even more off-topic.. time to move on.


--
Maarten


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Jerry
On Sun, 22 Nov 2009 14:25:09 -0500
Charles Marcus  replied:

> > If you are using a version <2007 then upgrading should be seriously
> > considered. The "ODF" format in the 2010 version is supposedly more
> > compliant than that used in OpenOffice.  
> 
> Rotflmao! You're not serious?? I think you are confusing the Microsoft
> OpenXML format with the PDF format. Microsoft's ODF support is pure
> CRAP

I have read at least two white papers that described Microsoft's support
for ODF in Office 2010. Both stated that Microsoft's support was more
compliant that that in Open Office. Apparently, OO has been playing
fast and loose with its implementation for awhile now.

As stated, that is in the still unreleased Office 2010. You can Google
around for further information. I don't have the URLs in front of me at
the moment.

-- 
Jerry
ges...@yahoo.com

|===
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|

It takes both a weapon, and two people, to commit a murder.



Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Maarten Bezemer


On Sun, 22 Nov 2009, Charles Marcus wrote:


On 11/22/2009, Maarten Bezemer (mcbdove...@robuust.nl) wrote:

But at least now that I moved the Outlook.pst and
outlooku...@servername-02.pst to a samba share, it is useable.
Still puzzled as to why they decided to store those in de
LocalSettings instead of in the normal user profile or a standard
network share...


They store them there because Microsft recommends against storing .PST
files on network shareas... always have. Things can break really badly.

That said, I have heard some people claim they have been doing this for
a long time and never gotten bit.


I've seen PST's breaking for other reasons as well, even when still in 
LocalSettings. And I've never seen a PST get broken up to the point where 
the scanpst.exe tool couldn't fix it. Plus, we can do regular backups of 
all PSTs during the night, which only leaves 1 day's worth of appointments 
getting lost. Email can be synced from the IMAP server. Still, I'd rather 
not have the PST contain emails: that's what we use IMAP for.


And, with Windows2003 terminal server running as a virtual machine on top 
of the Linux server that hosts the samba shares, chances of network shares 
being unavailable to the windows server are quite slim ;-)



--
Maarten


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Frank Cusack
On November 21, 2009 9:39:10 PM -0800 Seth Mattinen  
wrote:

 The fact that it can't "delete" by moving a copy to a "deleted
items" folder still bugs me enough that I won't use it.


Not a useful feature anyway, IMHO.  Of course this is a user preference
but I like my deleted emails to stay right where they are thank you
very much.  Then as I'm continuing on down the thread and realize I
want to undelete a message, it's right there.

With expunge-on-close in combination with dovecot's lazy_expunge, it's
a perfect combination.

If the client moves deleted messages to a trash folder, then it has to
rethread messages which potentially changes the order (not for Outlook
generated mail, which doesn't generate useful threading info) and then
the "next" message after deletion might be different.  That would be
annoying.

-frank


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Maarten Bezemer


On Mon, 23 Nov 2009, vus...@test123.ru wrote:

Outlook is best email client. Even 2003. The only missing thing is 
inability to do imap-search request directly to imap server.


I won't say Outlook is the worst email client I've ever seen, but we all 
know that 'best' and 'Outlook' can only be in one sentence if it is 
accompanied by 'alternative to'...
Outlook 2007 is better than 2003, for example with non-ascii text. With 
2003, it's not possible to use a unicode pst for IMAP, so emails in (iirc) 
koi8-r are stored in the pst as all questionmarks. Forwarding them or 
saving them to another folder also forwards those changes to the IMAP 
server, effectively ruining the message. With Outlook 2007 things have 
improved, but it's still a mess.


This FTS issue _may_be_ the problem in environment where users have not 
primary workstation. And thanks to Jerry for pointing another issue - 
problem if user logs in another workstation without logging out from 
first.


Well, that part has been tackled by having the pst on a samba share: 
outlook simply won't open if you're still running it on another 
computer because then the PST is locked... To me, that sounds like a 
better solution than having multiple PSTs all with their own subset of the 
owner's emails.



I tried to migrate to another clients several times. In the long run 
Outlook is the best. Even for IMAP. It does not handle IMAP perfectly, 
but quite well. It works OK with dovecot-imapd. If you are on Windows 
and you have MSOffice, Outlook is the answer.


If you are on Windows, have MSOffice, don't need to administer lots of 
computers, and email in only one US-ASCII or ISO-LATIN1 supported 
language, then you might want to consider using Outlook. I've seen too 
many of my clients ordering me to install Outlook and then running in all 
kinds of trouble. Even as far as some changing to Squirrelmail because 
that at least enabled them to communicate with their colleagues in Russia 
etc. So Outlook is an answer only if you're prepared to face the 
consequences.



--
Maarten


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Luigi Rosa
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Charles Marcus said the following on 22/11/09 20:25:

> They store them there because Microsft recommends against storing .PST
> files on network shareas... always have. Things can break really badly.

If you store your PST on a file server and you make a backup of that server
during the night, you can avoid buying an enterprise license of exchange.

PST files are very bad: you cannot open them if they are stored on a read-only
file system (cdrom o r/o network share).

> That said, I have heard some people claim they have been doing this for
> a long time and never gotten bit.

A pair of customers do this for at least 10 years with no problem.



Ciao,
luigi

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God isn't dead, he just couldn't find a parking place.
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Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Charles Marcus
On 11/22/2009 7:46 AM, Jerry wrote:
>> But you have to take in account that Outlook is mainly a client of
>> Exchange that incidentally does POP3 and IMAP.

Correct - Outlook shines as an Exchange client - anything else and it is
anywhere from mediocre (POP) to sucks wind (IMAP).

> If you are using a version <2007 then upgrading should be seriously
> considered. The "ODF" format in the 2010 version is supposedly more
> compliant than that used in OpenOffice.

Rotflmao! You're not serious?? I think you are confusing the Microsoft
OpenXML format with the PDF format. Microsoft's ODF support is pure CRAP.


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Charles Marcus
On 11/22/2009, Maarten Bezemer (mcbdove...@robuust.nl) wrote:
> But at least now that I moved the Outlook.pst and
> outlooku...@servername-02.pst to a samba share, it is useable.
> Still puzzled as to why they decided to store those in de
> LocalSettings instead of in the normal user profile or a standard
> network share...

They store them there because Microsft recommends against storing .PST
files on network shareas... always have. Things can break really badly.

That said, I have heard some people claim they have been doing this for
a long time and never gotten bit.


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Charles Marcus
On 11/22/2009, Thomas Berezansky (tsb...@mvlc.org) wrote:
> Wait, what? I have, right now, a HTML message open, from an IMAP
> server, in Outlook 2007. Where did you hear that it wouldn't?

I saw it with my own two eyes...

Its been a while, maybe they addressed this with an update.

Regardless, their choice to use the Word HTML rendering engine makes
Outlook HTML support sucky at best.

When we were trying to get HTML messages to render on an IMAP account,
we compared HTML messages in Outlook to Thunderbird - same messages -
and Outlooks rendering was very different, and really bad. Thunderbirds
was perfect.

Outlook is CRAP as an IMAP client.


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Thomas Berezansky
Wait, what? I have, right now, a HTML message open, from an IMAP  
server, in Outlook 2007. Where did you hear that it wouldn't?


Thomas Berezansky
Merrimack Valley Library Consortium


Quoting Charles Marcus :


On 11/22/2009, Seth Mattinen (se...@rollernet.us) wrote:

They finally added the ability to set a "sent items" folder on the IMAP
server rather than using stupid tricks to copy it over, so that's a
plus. The fact that it can't "delete" by moving a copy to a "deleted
items" folder still bugs me enough that I won't use it. No idea about
the PST size thing though, never got that far.


One thing that is ridiculous about 2007 is it won't display HTML
messages on IMAP servers... probably related to their totally BRAIN-DEAD
decision to use the WORD HTML rendering engine instead of the IE
rendering engine.

I understand that in spite of a huge number of complaints about this,
they did not fix this issue in Outlook 2010...






Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Charles Marcus
On 11/22/2009, Seth Mattinen (se...@rollernet.us) wrote:
> They finally added the ability to set a "sent items" folder on the IMAP
> server rather than using stupid tricks to copy it over, so that's a
> plus. The fact that it can't "delete" by moving a copy to a "deleted
> items" folder still bugs me enough that I won't use it. No idea about
> the PST size thing though, never got that far.

One thing that is ridiculous about 2007 is it won't display HTML
messages on IMAP servers... probably related to their totally BRAIN-DEAD
decision to use the WORD HTML rendering engine instead of the IE
rendering engine.

I understand that in spite of a huge number of complaints about this,
they did not fix this issue in Outlook 2010...


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Charles Marcus
On 11/21/2009, Jonathan (jonat...@kc8onw.net) wrote:
> Do you know anything about the date issue I mentioned where TB shows
> emails with a date of the last time the folder was indexed instead of
> when the email was actually delivered?

I missed that... but if that is occurring, then it seems like something
else is going on. Thunderbird does NOT modify the messages - headers or
body - on the server, it simply displays what is there. Sometimes the
local cache can get out of whack, which is fixed by deleting the .msf
(local indexes) and letting TBird rebuild them from scratch.


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Luigi Rosa
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vus...@test123.ru said the following on 22/11/09 18:19:

> Maildir just for FTS? 

OSX changed its local mail storage to simil-maildir when has been added Exposé.



Ciao,
luigi

- --
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+--[Luigi Rosa]--
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And on the eighth day, we bulldozed it.
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Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread vuser1
Maildir just for FTS? Standard Windows Search component (available for free) 
handles PST files excellently. Outlook is best email client. Even 2003. The 
only missing thing is inability to do imap-search request directly to imap 
server. So, if the message is not yet downloaded to local PST, Outlook (and 
Windows Search) will not find it. That's why webmail+dovecot fts is good thing 
to have. This FTS issue _may_be_ the problem in environment where users have 
not primary workstation. And thanks to Jerry for pointing another issue - 
problem if user logs in another workstation without logging out from first.

I tried to migrate to another clients several times. In the long run Outlook is 
the best. Even for IMAP. It does not handle IMAP perfectly, but quite well. It 
works OK with dovecot-imapd. If you are on Windows and you have MSOffice, 
Outlook is the answer.

> Maarten Bezemer said the following on 22/11/09 17:19:
>
>> [Of course, one could argue that they should make Outlook conform to
>> standards instead, but since they never showed any interest in
>> conforming to standards with any product, that would be naive. Even with
>> Vista's Windows Mail they adopted something "almost but not quite
>> entirely unlike" Maildir format. Still better than PST, true..]
>
> Thy did this for the same reason OSX moved to a (sort of) maildir for local
> storage: ability to do a fulltext search within mail and easily identify the
> message in the result list of the search.
>
>
> Ciao,
> luigi
>
> - --
> /
> +--[Luigi Rosa]--
> \
>
> It is by will alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the juice of
> Sapho that thoughts acquire speed, the lips acquire stains.
> The stains become a warning.
> It is by will alone I set my mind in motion.
>        --Mentat mantra, Frank Herbert, "Dune"
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>

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Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Luigi Rosa
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Maarten Bezemer said the following on 22/11/09 17:19:

> [Of course, one could argue that they should make Outlook conform to
> standards instead, but since they never showed any interest in
> conforming to standards with any product, that would be naive. Even with
> Vista's Windows Mail they adopted something "almost but not quite
> entirely unlike" Maildir format. Still better than PST, true..]

Thy did this for the same reason OSX moved to a (sort of) maildir for local
storage: ability to do a fulltext search within mail and easily identify the
message in the result list of the search.


Ciao,
luigi

- --
/
+--[Luigi Rosa]--
\

It is by will alone I set my mind in motion. It is by the juice of
Sapho that thoughts acquire speed, the lips acquire stains.
The stains become a warning.
It is by will alone I set my mind in motion.
   --Mentat mantra, Frank Herbert, "Dune"
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Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Maarten Bezemer


On Sun, 22 Nov 2009, Jerry wrote:


Of course this only applies to Microsoft Office 2010, a BETA of
which is available at:


I am very happy to know that Microsft acknowledged at dawn of 2010
that the limitation of personal storage is pointless.


The original PST specifications were developed when nobody had ever
heard of a 'gig' of storage. It probably made sense then. In today's
environment, it is indeed obsolete. From what I have read, Microsoft
has totally revamped the PST format. In fact, they are suppose to be
releasing the specs for it when Office 2010 is officially released.


It might be just me, but I can't read the 'revamp' thing in the article 
you link to. It just talks about how wonderful it is that they are going 
to put the format under their (IMNSHO pretty bad) Open Specification 
promise. The reason for doing that is clearly selfish: by allowing others 
to do something with the currently proprietary PST files, they wouldn't 
have to fear loosing the market to competitor's desktop products.
What they SHOULD have done, was open up their MAPI protocol, to allow 
other back-end programs to talk to Outlook in a way that Outlook 
understands. Now THAT would be helping interoperability.


[Of course, one could argue that they should make Outlook conform to 
standards instead, but since they never showed any interest in conforming 
to standards with any product, that would be naive. Even with Vista's 
Windows Mail they adopted something "almost but not quite entirely 
unlike" Maildir format. Still better than PST, true..]


Having said that.. IMAP support in Outlook sure has improved from 2003 to 
2007. It just has a long way to go. Using Outlook 2007 in a network 
environment with IMAP breaks every time a user logs in to another 
workstation. It took me a while to find a workaround, and it's still not 
entirely stable. But at least now that I moved the Outlook.pst and 
outlooku...@servername-02.pst to a samba share, it is useable. Still 
puzzled as to why they decided to store those in de LocalSettings instead 
of in the normal user profile or a standard network share...


--
Maarten


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Jerry
On Sun, 22 Nov 2009 14:33:46 +0100
Luigi Rosa  replied:

> Jerry said the following on 22/11/09 13:46:
> 
> > Of course this only applies to Microsoft Office 2010, a BETA of
> > which is available at:  
> 
> I am very happy to know that Microsft acknowledged at dawn of 2010
> that the limitation of personal storage is pointless.

The original PST specifications were developed when nobody had ever
heard of a 'gig' of storage. It probably made sense then. In today's
environment, it is indeed obsolete. From what I have read, Microsoft
has totally revamped the PST format. In fact, they are suppose to be
releasing the specs for it when Office 2010 is officially released.

-- 
Jerry
ges...@yahoo.com

|===
|===
|===
|===
|

Information Center, n.:
A room staffed by professional computer people whose job it is
to tell you why you cannot have the information you require.



Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Luigi Rosa
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Jerry said the following on 22/11/09 13:46:

> Of course this only applies to Microsoft Office 2010, a BETA of which
> is available at:

I am very happy to know that Microsft acknowledged at dawn of 2010 that the
limitation of personal storage is pointless.


Ciao,
luigi

- --
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+--[Luigi Rosa]--
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The prejudices people feel about each other disappear when they get to know each
other.
--James Kirk, "Elaan of Troyius"
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Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Jerry
On Sun, 22 Nov 2009 12:25:22 +0100
Luigi Rosa  replied:

> Thomas Harold said the following on 22/11/09 03:51:
> 
> > Out of morbid curiosity... how good is Outlook 2007 at IMAP?  
> 
> Better than 2003. In 2007 you can even store your sent mail in an
> IMAP box instead on a local folder.
> 
> The new PST file formt has still a size limit (20 gigs).
> 
> But you have to take in account that Outlook is mainly a client of
> Exchange that incidentally does POP3 and IMAP.

They have made major changes to the *.pst format, including size limit.
You could start here for some basic information.

http://blogs.msdn.com/outlook/archive/2009/10/29/outlook-pst-file-format-and-interoperability.aspx

Of course this only applies to Microsoft Office 2010, a BETA of which
is available at:

http://blogs.msdn.com/outlook/archive/2009/11/18/announcing-microsoft-office-2010-beta.aspx

If you are using a version <2007 then upgrading should be seriously
considered. The "ODF" format in the 2010 version is supposedly more
compliant than that used in OpenOffice.

-- 
Jerry
ges...@yahoo.com

|===
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|===
|===
|

I came to MIT to get an education for myself and a diploma for my
mother.



Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread LuKreme
On 21-Nov-2009, at 19:51, Thomas Harold wrote:
> Out of morbid curiosity... how good is Outlook 2007 at IMAP?  I've had 
> experience with Outlook 2003 and the 2GB PST limit was a deal breaker for me. 
>  I'm curious whether Outlook is getting better or worse at IMAP.


It's better, but is still stupid in too many ways. The biggest issue I saw 
with'07 was that deleted mails were deleted instead of moved to a trash folder. 
If I recall right, there were still some issues with moving emails between 
folders.

-- 
The trouble with witches is that they'll never run away from things they really 
hate.
And the trouble with small furry animals in a corner is that, just 
occasionally, one of them's a mongoose. --Witches Abroad



Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-22 Thread Luigi Rosa
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Thomas Harold said the following on 22/11/09 03:51:

> Out of morbid curiosity... how good is Outlook 2007 at IMAP?  

Better than 2003. In 2007 you can even store your sent mail in an IMAP box
instead on a local folder.

The new PST file formt has still a size limit (20 gigs).

But you have to take in account that Outlook is mainly a client of Exchange that
incidentally does POP3 and IMAP.


Ciao,
luigi

- --
/
+--[Luigi Rosa]--
\

Morpheus: How did I beat you?
Neo: You... you're too fast.
Morpheus: Do you believe that my being stronger or faster has anything
  to do with my muscles in this place? Do you think that's air you're
  breathing now?
--"Matrix"
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Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread Thomas Berezansky
Didn't notice that my reply to this didn't include the list (the  
default reply option due to having my address directly was "to  
sender", not "to list" due to a local setting). Only noticed after the  
fact.


My response:

One of my IMAP folders has over 13000 messages and is handled fine,  
but I am not currently sure how much actual space that is taking up  
right now. I suspect it isn't even half a GB. However, Microsoft  
states (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/830336) that Outlook 2007  
doesn't use the 2GB limited format for anything by default, and that  
the default limit is 20GB as a result, likely with registry options to  
allow it to grow larger.


The only issue I see with "deleting messages doesn't make them go  
away" is that "delete" on an IMAP account is "flag as deleted" by  
default, which means you need to issue an IMAP purge command. As I  
don't use "trash" folders I prefer this behavior, even in Thunderbird  
and Horde. I just add the purge commands to my toolbar. I think the  
flagged as deleted thing is what you are thinking about with the "some  
sort of compact operation", and is technically how IMAP is supposed to  
handle deletes.


For that issue, there is a "Purge items when switching folders while  
online" option, per account, that can be enabled. Also, the showing of  
deleted items is optional (when shown they, in all clients I have  
used, have a strike-through applied to them).


Thomas Berezansky
Merrimack Valley Library Consortium


Quoting Thomas Harold :


On 11/20/2009 1:51 PM, Thomas Berezansky wrote:

Personally, I am using Horde (http://www.horde.org/) at work (this
address) and Outlook 2007 at home (largely due to getting freaky
attachments I need to open on a regular basis that only Microsoft mail
clients seem to be able to open properly).


Out of morbid curiosity... how good is Outlook 2007 at IMAP?  I've  
had experience with Outlook 2003 and the 2GB PST limit was a deal  
breaker for me.  I'm curious whether Outlook is getting better or  
worse at IMAP.


(In OL2003, they introduced a better PST format that was no longer  
limited to 2GB.  But you can't use it with IMAP accounts.  It also  
had weird behavior like deleting messages would not make them vanish  
from the folder until you did some sort of compact operation.)







Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread Seth Mattinen
Thomas Harold wrote:
> On 11/20/2009 1:51 PM, Thomas Berezansky wrote:
>> Personally, I am using Horde (http://www.horde.org/) at work (this
>> address) and Outlook 2007 at home (largely due to getting freaky
>> attachments I need to open on a regular basis that only Microsoft mail
>> clients seem to be able to open properly).
> 
> Out of morbid curiosity... how good is Outlook 2007 at IMAP?  I've had
> experience with Outlook 2003 and the 2GB PST limit was a deal breaker
> for me.  I'm curious whether Outlook is getting better or worse at IMAP.

They finally added the ability to set a "sent items" folder on the IMAP
server rather than using stupid tricks to copy it over, so that's a
plus. The fact that it can't "delete" by moving a copy to a "deleted
items" folder still bugs me enough that I won't use it. No idea about
the PST size thing though, never got that far.

~Seth


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread Thomas Harold

On 11/21/2009 9:54 PM, Jonathan wrote:


Okay, that didn't take long. I have another spurious unread message
already. Should I do what it says here [1] and grab a nightly build and
create an entire new profile, or should I just report with what I have?
Any suggestions on what component to file the report against?


If you decide to use the nightly, start with a new profile and try 
either (wait a day and I think we'll see a build #3 for RC1):


http://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/thunderbird/nightly/3.0rc1-candidates/build2/

or

http://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/thunderbird/nightly/2009-11-21-03-comm-1.9.1/

Thunderbird 3.0 is based off of Comm-1.9.1, the previews for Thunderbird 
3.1 are Comm-1.9.3.  The nightly builds for 1.9.1 seem to happen in the 
early morning hours.


As for which component... I'd say either Mail Window Front End or Mail 
Reader UI.


https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/describecomponents.cgi?product=Thunderbird

You'll probably have to catch it in the act while logging is turned on.

https://wiki.mozilla.org/MailNews:Logging

You may also want to rule out hardware issues such as flaky memory, 
which could be causing corruption in the indexes.


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread Thomas Harold

On 11/21/2009 9:42 PM, Jonathan wrote:


Do you know anything about the date issue I mentioned where TB shows
emails with a date of the last time the folder was indexed instead of
when the email was actually delivered?



I've seen that bug, I generally either reindex / compact or completely 
unsubscribe and then resubscribe to the folder after restarting TB v2.


I don't think I've seen it on the TB 3 side in the past 6 months since I 
started with beta 2.  There's been a lot of work as well on indexing in 
Beta 3/4 when they introduced "gloda" (the global indexer).


(I severely abuse TB, having folders with 50k messages in them, 
subscribing to dozens of mailing lists... good thing that I'm the mail 
admin and don't have to worry about quotas.)


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread Jonathan

On 11/21/2009 9:15 PM, Thomas wrote:

Re,


As someone else noted it may be related to the amount of email I have.
I probably have nearly 100,000 messages spread across 30-40 folders
right now.

Close TB. Delete your .msf to recreate indexes. Start TB again and let
it re-index (it will take a while). Then everything should be fine. If
not do a bug report.


Okay, that didn't take long.  I have another spurious unread message 
already.  Should I do what it says here [1] and grab a nightly build and 
create an entire new profile, or should I just report with what I have? 
 Any suggestions on what component to file the report against?


Jonathan

[1]
http://www.mozilla.org/support/thunderbird/bugs


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread Thomas Harold

On 11/20/2009 2:16 PM, Charles Sprickman wrote:


We're talking about a mailbox with two or more users always in it and
around 40K messages across a few hundred folders. The scale of it all
seems to be part of the issue I think.



I run TB v2 on my laptop and TB v3 betas on my desktop.  I've not seen 
messages suddenly getting marked as unread.


My mailing list mailbox subscribes to a few dozen mailing lists, so most 
folders have between 1k and 25k messages in them (about 2GB of mail). 
The postmaster mailbox routinely has folders with 40-50k messages in a 
single folder (error reports, mailbox size is up around 2GB at the moment).


We're using a MailDir storage format, Dovecot 1.1.6 with Postfix on the 
front end.  All running on top of CentOS 5.


(Biggest problem I've had with TB v2 is that it sometimes loses track of 
the server after a while, so you'll go to send a new message and it will 
get stuck trying to talk to the server.)


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread Thomas Harold

On 11/20/2009 1:51 PM, Thomas Berezansky wrote:

Personally, I am using Horde (http://www.horde.org/) at work (this
address) and Outlook 2007 at home (largely due to getting freaky
attachments I need to open on a regular basis that only Microsoft mail
clients seem to be able to open properly).


Out of morbid curiosity... how good is Outlook 2007 at IMAP?  I've had 
experience with Outlook 2003 and the 2GB PST limit was a deal breaker 
for me.  I'm curious whether Outlook is getting better or worse at IMAP.


(In OL2003, they introduced a better PST format that was no longer 
limited to 2GB.  But you can't use it with IMAP accounts.  It also had 
weird behavior like deleting messages would not make them vanish from 
the folder until you did some sort of compact operation.)


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread Jonathan

On 11/21/2009 9:15 PM, Thomas wrote:

Re,


As someone else noted it may be related to the amount of email I have.
I probably have nearly 100,000 messages spread across 30-40 folders
right now.

Close TB. Delete your .msf to recreate indexes. Start TB again and let
it re-index (it will take a while). Then everything should be fine. If
not do a bug report.


MSF files deleted.  The problem occurs pretty randomly so it will be a 
few days to a week before I know whether that fixed it.


Do you know anything about the date issue I mentioned where TB shows 
emails with a date of the last time the folder was indexed instead of 
when the email was actually delivered?


Thanks,
Jonathan


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread Thomas Harold

On 11/20/2009 12:59 PM, Jonathan wrote:

I'm getting tired of Thunderbird telling me I have unread messages in
folders that haven't gotten new messages for months so I'm looking for a
new mail client. I know the problem lies with Thunderbird because
everything is fine via RoundCube and if it tell Thunderbird to rebuild
it's index it shows the folder correctly again. Except of course for a
subset of the messages in my inbox that it insists where delivered at
the exact time I re-indexed it, every time.


I'm currently testing out the Thunderbird 3.0 release candidates... 
overall, it's better then TB 2 was at IMAP.  Overall, I'm pretty happy 
with version 3 and how it deals with my multi-gigabyte IMAP mailboxes 
with dozens of folders.  Stability seems to be better then it was in TB 
v2 in terms of indexing and downloading messages.


(That comes with a huge caveat, however.  Beta 4 introduced some rather 
severe bugs in IMAP performance which have yet to be fixed as of RC1 
build #2.  I'm hoping that this coming week there will be another more 
stable build.)


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread Thomas

Re,

As someone else noted it may be related to the amount of email I have. I 
probably have nearly 100,000 messages spread across 30-40 folders right 
now.
Close TB. Delete your .msf to recreate indexes. Start TB again and let 
it re-index (it will take a while). Then everything should be fine. If 
not do a bug report.


Cheers,
Thomas


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread Jonathan

On 11/21/2009 7:22 PM, Thomas wrote:

Hi Jonathan,


I'm getting tired of Thunderbird telling me I have unread messages in
folders that haven't gotten new messages for months so I'm looking for
a new mail client. [..]


Yes, it's a Thunderbird issue only. Usually that appears when you don't
compact your folders (you can ask TB to compact by itself as well). 90%
of the time when you have weird stuff in your folders that's because you
didn't compact your folders.


I would agree with that if it happened to folder I used actively but 
I've had thunderbird mark emails as unread in my 2003-2006 archive 
folder, which obviously hasn't been touched since early 2007 so 
something weird is going on.


As someone else noted it may be related to the amount of email I have. 
I probably have nearly 100,000 messages spread across 30-40 folders 
right now.


Jonathan


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread Thomas

Hi Jonathan,

I'm getting tired of Thunderbird telling me I have unread messages in 
folders that haven't gotten new messages for months so I'm looking for a 
new mail client.  [..]


Yes, it's a Thunderbird issue only. Usually that appears when you don't
compact your folders (you can ask TB to compact by itself as well). 90%
of the time when you have weird stuff in your folders that's because you
didn't compact your folders.

http://kb.mozillazine.org/Duplicate_messages_received
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Thunderbird_:_Tips_:_Compacting_Folders

Cheers,
Thomas



Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread David Brown
I lost the thread on the Sylpheed suggestion so I am replying here to let 
everyone know that installing (dead easy) and using (even easier) Sylpheed on 
my Windows XP netbook solved all of what I thought were Dovecot/IMAP problems. 
Apologies to Timo for the unnecessary complaints about non-existent problems. 
Both Dovecot and Sylpheed out-of-the-box will work without a lot of config if 
any at all. --David.

On Sat, 21 Nov 2009 13:05:08 -0500
Frank Cusack  wrote:

> On November 20, 2009 12:59:48 PM -0500 Jonathan  wrote:
> > So what IMAP clients do people prefer these days?  Preferably windows or
> > cross platform and it needs to have decent key bindings because (probably
> > like many of you) I get 100s of emails a day via lists and anything that
> > speeds my way through them is good.
> 
> You simply cannot beat gnus for configurability, functionality and raw
> power.  But you have to be pretty dedicated to get it configured at all,
> much less customized to your preferences.
> 
> I like Mulberry as a GUI client.  It works on Mac Windows and Linux/Unix.
> 
> -frank


-- 
David Brown 


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-21 Thread Frank Cusack

On November 20, 2009 12:59:48 PM -0500 Jonathan  wrote:

So what IMAP clients do people prefer these days?  Preferably windows or
cross platform and it needs to have decent key bindings because (probably
like many of you) I get 100s of emails a day via lists and anything that
speeds my way through them is good.


You simply cannot beat gnus for configurability, functionality and raw
power.  But you have to be pretty dedicated to get it configured at all,
much less customized to your preferences.

I like Mulberry as a GUI client.  It works on Mac Windows and Linux/Unix.

-frank


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread David Jonas

On 11/20/09 , Nov 20, 11:13 AM, Charles Marcus wrote:

On 11/20/2009, Charles Sprickman (sp...@bway.net) wrote:
   

It is very good compared to TB2.  However, the exact problem the OP
described still exists in 3.0b4.  I've had the folks I setup with TB3
bugging the hell out of me about the "all of a sudden a bunch of
messages are marked new" issue.
 

This has to be some weird dovecot config problem... we just haven't ever
seen anything even close to that here.

Do you use mbox or maildir (we've always used maildir)?
   
I have this problem quite frequently. Only seems to happen on folders 
that have a ton of messages (i.e. dovecot mailing list). I've checked in 
a webmail IMAP client and they don't appear as unseen, so I'm guessing 
it is a TB problem. Not very thorough I know, but it certainly points to TB.


Using maildir DAS, dovecot 1.2.5, TB 3b4

And I thought it was just me :)



Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread Jerry
On Fri, 20 Nov 2009 13:38:43 -0500
Jonathan Jonathan  replied:

[snip]

> I'm giving Claws Mail, a fork of Sylpheed apparently, a try.  Haven't 
> found a way to change key bindings yet and SHIFT-! is really awkward
> for marking a message unread.



Place cursor over 'Mark as Read"

Press the key combination you want to use. Warning, you will not
receive a warning if over writing an existing binding. As always, RTFM
is a worth while exercise. CM has a forum that can answer any questions
that you might have as well.

-- 
Jerry
ges...@yahoo.com

|===
|===
|===
|===
|

I always say beauty is only sin deep.

Saki, "Reginald's Choir Treat"



Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread Charles Marcus
On 11/20/2009, Charles Sprickman (sp...@bway.net) wrote:
> We're talking about a mailbox with two or more users always in it and
> around 40K messages across a few hundred folders.  The scale of it
> all seems to be part of the issue I think.

Ok, last question then I'll shut up... ;)

Have you tried debugging using rawlog and/or the TBird debugging
techniques described on the wiki?

http://wiki.dovecot.org/Debugging/Thunderbird


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread Charles Sprickman

On Fri, 20 Nov 2009, Charles Marcus wrote:


On 11/20/2009, Charles Sprickman (sp...@bway.net) wrote:

It is very good compared to TB2.  However, the exact problem the OP
described still exists in 3.0b4.  I've had the folks I setup with TB3
bugging the hell out of me about the "all of a sudden a bunch of
messages are marked new" issue.


This has to be some weird dovecot config problem... we just haven't ever
seen anything even close to that here.


I doubt it...  As the OP said, this seems unique to TB.  Webmail 
(roundcube) does not have any issues.



Do you use mbox or maildir (we've always used maildir)?


Maildir.

We're talking about a mailbox with two or more users always in it and 
around 40K messages across a few hundred folders.  The scale of it all 
seems to be part of the issue I think.


C



Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread Charles Marcus
On 11/20/2009, Charles Marcus (cmar...@media-brokers.com) wrote:
> What IMAP server?

heh... dumb question, huh...

dovecot -n output?


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread Charles Marcus
On 11/20/2009, Charles Sprickman (sp...@bway.net) wrote:
> It is very good compared to TB2.  However, the exact problem the OP
> described still exists in 3.0b4.  I've had the folks I setup with TB3
> bugging the hell out of me about the "all of a sudden a bunch of
> messages are marked new" issue.

This has to be some weird dovecot config problem... we just haven't ever
seen anything even close to that here.

Do you use mbox or maildir (we've always used maildir)?


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread Charles Marcus
On 11/20/2009, Thomas Berezansky (tsb...@mvlc.org) wrote:
> and Outlook 2007 at home (largely due to getting freaky attachments I
> need to open on a regular basis that only Microsoft mail clients seem
> to be able to open properly).

If you're talking about winmail.dat files, I found a very simple/elegant
solution for TBird for our office that totally eliminated this problem -
happy to share if anyone wants...


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread Charles Sprickman

On Fri, 20 Nov 2009, John Gateley wrote:


Jonathan wrote:
So what IMAP clients do people prefer these days?  Preferably windows or 
cross platform and it needs to have decent key bindings...


Have you tried the new Thunderbird 3 beta? There was a thread
on this list recently about it. It has a lot of IMAP improvements.


It is very good compared to TB2.  However, the exact problem the OP 
described still exists in 3.0b4.  I've had the folks I setup with TB3 
bugging the hell out of me about the "all of a sudden a bunch of messages 
are marked new" issue.


Charles


Sylpheed has a new beta out as well with improved IMAP support.
(Sylpheed runs on Windows and Linux, I wish it ran on Macs).

j



Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread Thomas Berezansky
Personally, I am using Horde (http://www.horde.org/) at work (this  
address) and Outlook 2007 at home (largely due to getting freaky  
attachments I need to open on a regular basis that only Microsoft mail  
clients seem to be able to open properly).


Horde is a webmail client, and works well in Firefox (where you can  
open the left hand menu in a sidebar separate from your tabs). I  
install it with the calendar, notes, tasks, etc included and we tell  
our users to log into it in order to change their passwords.


Thomas Berezansky
Merrimack Valley Library Consortium


Quoting Jonathan :

I'm getting tired of Thunderbird telling me I have unread messages  
in folders that haven't gotten new messages for months so I'm  
looking for a new mail client.  I know the problem lies with  
Thunderbird because everything is fine via RoundCube and if it tell  
Thunderbird to rebuild it's index it shows the folder correctly  
again.  Except of course for a subset of the messages in my inbox  
that it insists where delivered at the exact time I re-indexed it,  
every time.


So what IMAP clients do people prefer these days?  Preferably  
windows or cross platform and it needs to have decent key bindings  
because (probably like many of you) I get 100s of emails a day via  
lists and anything that speeds my way through them is good.


I run my own server (probably obvious being on this list) and can  
install webmail clients as well.  I ran squirrelmail for a while but  
although functional it's quite dated.  I'm using RoundCube for  
access away from my systems now but it lacks keyboard shortcut  
support and trying to click one email after another with a laptop  
touchpad gets painful fast.


Thanks,
Jonathan






Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread Charles Marcus
On 11/20/2009 12:59 PM, Jonathan wrote:
> I'm getting tired of Thunderbird telling me I have unread messages in
> folders that haven't gotten new messages for months so I'm looking for a
> new mail client.  I know the problem lies with Thunderbird because
> everything is fine via RoundCube and if it tell Thunderbird to rebuild
> it's index it shows the folder correctly again.  Except of course for a
> subset of the messages in my inbox that it insists where delivered at
> the exact time I re-indexed it, every time.

What IMAP server?

We have been using Thunderbird for about 8 years on 60+ computers since
about version 0.8, and have *never* had a *recurring* problem like that.
Of course there have been the occasional time I had to delete the
folders and let TBird redownload everything and rebuild the indexes, but
never, ever has there been a recurring problem...

Methinks there is something else going on, it is not thunderbird per se
(yes, I understand you are only seeing this when using TBird).

I can't wait for TBird 3 for all of the IMAP improvements...


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread Jonathan

On 11/20/2009 1:27 PM, John Gateley wrote:

Jonathan wrote:

So what IMAP clients do people prefer these days? Preferably windows
or cross platform and it needs to have decent key bindings...


Have you tried the new Thunderbird 3 beta? There was a thread
on this list recently about it. It has a lot of IMAP improvements.


I'm running Beta 4 now.  I could try dropping back to Thunderbird 2.x 
but I don't want to have to choose between features and stability like 
that.  I'm greedy and want both.



Sylpheed has a new beta out as well with improved IMAP support.
(Sylpheed runs on Windows and Linux, I wish it ran on Macs).


I'm giving Claws Mail, a fork of Sylpheed apparently, a try.  Haven't 
found a way to change key bindings yet and SHIFT-! is really awkward for 
marking a message unread.


Jonathan


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread Tassilo Horn
Jonathan  writes:

Hi Jonathan!

> So what IMAP clients do people prefer these days?

I use Gnus [1], the version that is included in Emacs 23.

> Preferably windows or cross platform and it needs to have decent key
> bindings because (probably like many of you) I get 100s of emails a
> day via lists and anything that speeds my way through them is good.

Gnus has those, but far more important to good key bindings is good
scoring mechanisms.  I also get more than 200 messages from several
lists, but three quarters of them are not interesting to me and already
scored down by Gnus.  Because I sort threads by score and use different
fonts for different scores, the important ones are easily visible.

Bye,
Tassilo
__
[1] http://www.gnus.org



Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread John Gateley

Jonathan wrote:
So what IMAP clients do people prefer these days?  Preferably windows or 
cross platform and it needs to have decent key bindings...


Have you tried the new Thunderbird 3 beta? There was a thread
on this list recently about it. It has a lot of IMAP improvements.

Sylpheed has a new beta out as well with improved IMAP support.
(Sylpheed runs on Windows and Linux, I wish it ran on Macs).

j


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread Nicolas KOWALSKI
On Fri, 20 Nov 2009, Jonathan wrote:
> So what IMAP clients do people prefer these days?  Preferably windows or cross
> platform and it needs to have decent key bindings because (probably like many
> of you) I get 100s of emails a day via lists and anything that speeds my way
> through them is good.

I would recommend mutt and alpine. 

They both works well with dovecot. Mutt is more powerfull and 
configurable (after learning how to set it up); alpine is more 
straightforward at first.

-- 
Nicolas


Re: [Dovecot] [OT] preferred clients

2009-11-20 Thread Marcus Rueckert
screen+mutt

-- 
   openSUSE - SUSE Linux is my linux
   openSUSE is good for you
   www.opensuse.org