>I think there may also be an option to use a personal token (which may
>have to be enabled). I cannot search for it at the moment, but I do
>recall seeing some discussion in the Davmail forums about using a token
>instead of MFA.
Here is my understanding of the situation. It certainly ma
In the past, I once made this work by forwarding O365 to gmail, setting up
gmail's approved-spoofing so it can send mail as the O365 account, and then
using nmh to connect to gmail. I'm sure that ugly workaround isn't going to
be acceptable to everyone, though. Sorry for your loss.
~Chad
P.S. Send
Thus said Ken Hornstein on Tue, 30 Apr 2019 13:23:37 -0400:
> Thank you for that pointer; sadly, I went through the whole process of
> getting it started, it DID pop up the right window to prompt for MFA,
> but the domain I use is configured to require administrator approval
> to use another em
>> $WORK migrated my email to Office365 this week.
>
>I've had a similar experience and was able to reintegrate nmh by using
>Davmail to provide a POP interface to Office365---if they don't provide
>one for you already. Use search engines to discover more about Davmail.
Thank you for that point
Thus said berg...@merctech.com on Thu, 25 Apr 2019 20:08:02 -0400:
> $WORK migrated my email to Office365 this week.
I've had a similar experience and was able to reintegrate nmh by using
Davmail to provide a POP interface to Office365---if they don't provide
one for you already. Use search en
>> You know ... you MIGHT be able to use nmh with Office 365 (they claim to
>> support POP servers, although when I tried poking at it a bit it didn't
>> quite work ... we might have bugs, which I would love to fix).
>
>Maybe OAUTH2 is necessary. I just registered nmh as an app with
>Microsoft. I
Ken wrote:
> [Mark:]
> >$WORK migrated my email to Office365 this week.
>
> You know ... you MIGHT be able to use nmh with Office 365 (they claim to
> support POP servers, although when I tried poking at it a bit it didn't
> quite work ... we might have bugs, which I would love to fix).
Maybe OAU
>$WORK migrated my email to Office365 this week.
You know ... you MIGHT be able to use nmh with Office 365 (they claim to
support POP servers, although when I tried poking at it a bit it didn't
quite work ... we might have bugs, which I would love to fix).
--Ken
--
nmh-workers
https://lists.non
$WORK migrated my email to Office365 this week.
I now appreciate [n]mh more than I ever have since I began using it in 1987.
I want to thank each of you who is helping to keep nmh alive and functioning
-- I owe you all an adult beverage.
Mark
--
nmh-workers
https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/lis
n...@dad.org writes:
> I will shortly have completed my 82nd trip around the sun.
And I am grateful to you, along with a cast of others, that I have been
able to share the MH bus with you for 30 of those trips.
> Recently, three
> people who were important to me: Tora Bickson, my esteemed and b
>So, before I leave, I want to thank all who have participated in MH, NMH, and
>their off shoots, as designers, implementers, users and critics for their part
>in what I regard as the signal accomplishment of my career -- a career not
>without other accomplishments, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nor
Indeed I am paying attention.
I second Robert's comments.
MH has served me faithfully (if somewhat begrudgingly
now and again - grin) on a production basis since
1980. I played with it before that but after I landed
at LBL and came face to face with the Unix version of MSG,
"Something had to be d
Bob Carragher wrote:
> I've been using (N)MH since 1991, and it has been my great
> pleasure to have done so. I've installed it on every system I've
> acquired sys-admin authority for.
And many where I could only "./configure --prefix=$HOME"
Many people are surprised when I express
I second Bob's words.
I've been using [n]mh since 1987, and actually still have some
emails from that time frame!
My contributions have been limited to one change (circa 1995) to
support SCO 5 Openserver, but have been a faithful user and very
glad to have made the digital aquaintence of Norm an
Delurking to echo the sentiments posted by others.
I've been using (N)MH since 1991, and it has been my great
pleasure to have done so. I've installed it on every system I've
acquired sys-admin authority for.
I hope to use it for as long as I'm emailing, because I've yet to
find any other mailer
norm, it's been a distinct pleasure using your software all these years,
and exchanging views with you on this mailing list in recent years. so
let me say thank you, personally and professionally, for your
contributions to "my" world. it is my goal by the time i have gone
around Sol 82 times to hav
Robert wrote:
> Norm,
>
> I hope I speak for all of us when I say we all hope, and expect,
> that you will be with us for many years to come.
I am certain that you do speak, and very well at that, for all of us.
Thank you, Norm, for MH and your contributions to its derivatives.
And, Happy Birt
I have mostly been read-only for years having done some work installing MH
to run on some early PDP (maybe early VAX) BSD Unix in the early 1980s.
Still have an older box running in my basement with MH running on it
(think early model SUN workstation).
I very much echo the thoughts expressed b
Norm,
I hope I speak for all of us when I say we all hope, and expect,
that you will be with us for many years to come.
I am perhaps one one of the longest time users of MH here, apart from
you of course, and maybe Mike O'Dell if he's still paying attention - at
Melbourne, we had one of the 6th e
I will shortly have completed my 82nd trip around the sun. Recently, three
people who were important to me: Tora Bickson, my esteemed and beloved
colleague, my sister and Willis Ware, my friend and ex-boss all died, in rapid
succession, and before I had a chance to thank them for all they had done
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