Hi,
I've seen stray emails highlighted, but not in the way described.
(switching folders)
I'll keep an eye on it and report if I can notice a pattern.
More than 31,000 emails in my DB, mostly imported from Eudora.
5.5b2, MacBook Pro, 2GB RAM, OS 10.4.7
Bruce
As Richard Hart wrote...
>Yes. I h
Yes. I had this problem for a long time, and it stumped PowerMail support.
I can't give you specific steps to apply, but I do know it has something
to do with number of messages in the database. At the time, I had more
than 5,000 messages. For unrelated reasons, I reduced this to about
3,000, and
Hi all,
Well I am using 5.5b2 and am experiencing my first problem:
If I switch from whatever mailbox I'm in to a different one, the 2nd
email in the list becomes highlighted. It doesn't matter what column
I'm sorted by. In fact, if I resort, the 2nd item stays selected (that
is, not the same e
>>As a rather trivial example, when I post to this mailing list from my
>>home mac (I'm at work right now using a Windoze machine) I normally use
>>a signature which contains my system stats, including PowerMail version.
>> As one might expect, I don't always remember to do this.
>
>Neither did I,
Signatures specifically assigned to an account I use often, for example
I only add my name and no quotations, addresses, phone numbers etc.
when I respond to a list - yes, I like it clean and simple and after
seeing somebody's 15 line long information footer it gets boring for me
to glance over it
On Wed, Sep 27, 2006 at 9:58 pm -0400, Tim Lapin (sympatico) wrote:
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>On 9/27/2006 3:53 PM, PowerMail Engineering wrote:
>>
>> Since some time (PowerMail 5.0 maybe), outgoing filters are applied
>> before sending, so they can change the account, ad
Tim Lapin wrote:
>Does this mean I can associate a particular signature with a given
>recipient in the "To:" field? (assuming only one "To:" recipient)
Yes
Jérôme - PowerMail Engineering
-
"I'm using Powermail for years n
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On 9/27/2006 3:53 PM, PowerMail Engineering wrote:
> Wayne Brissette wrote:
>
>> You would have to save it as a draft, then apply the script. The script
>> would have to be responsible for sending the message, because you're
>> absolutely correct, fil
Steve Abrahamson:
>Simon,
>
>I'm not sure what "a long way" is on your monitor, but the jpg you
>posted is about 2/3 the width of the window size I usually use; I wonder
>if a narrow default window size is making the address columns do
>something funny for you.
Oh, it's not a problem, I've found
While I agree that notions of priority are never the same between sender and
recipient, most software (and believe me, I've tried most if not all) on
windows and mac has the option of setting message priority. Whether you use
it is up to you, but it is there if you need it. Even mail.app has it now
>I'm not convinced, personally, that it does work for the vast majority
>of users. You may know a lot of people who use the priority header in
>email frequently; I don't know a single one. So, as they say, your
>mileage may vary.
Having that rather simple feature added will only be of service to t
On 9/27/06 at 9:16 PM, Simon Troup ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) said:
>If you make the window really big, stretch the name column out a long
>way, click in the message area to remove the focus from the recipient
>list and then reduce the window size, you get this!
Simon,
I'm not sure what "a long way" is
On 9/27/06 at 9:05 PM, Simon Troup ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) said:
>Steve Abrahamson:
>>The problem with setting a priority is that not all email clients
>>support it, or are configured to support it. For instance, one of the
>>things I like about PowerMail is that I can completely ignore someone
>>*els
Jim Pistrang:
>>2) I can't figure out for the life of me how to make recipients BCC or
>>CC etc, and how to set a priority.
>
>Click on the 'To' to the left of the address, you'll get a dropdown list
>where you can set CC or BCC
Ah!
If you make the window really big, stretch the name column out
>I'm perfectly happy knowing that it works for the vast majority of
>users. It seems like a glaring omission in Powermails coding to me.
The issue is not is it missing, but what is the standard? X- headers are just
that, extra heading information the spec says you can put there. There isn't
an
Steve Abrahamson:
>The problem with setting a priority is that not all email clients
>support it, or are configured to support it. For instance, one of the
>things I like about PowerMail is that I can completely ignore someone
>*else's* notion of priority in what they're sending me ;-)
>
>Unless yo
>Since some time (PowerMail 5.0 maybe), outgoing filters are applied
>before sending, so they can change the account, add a BCC recipient and
>other useful things.
Just goes to show you how I've let my scripting with PM languish.
Thanks Jérôme!
Wayne
Wayne Brissette wrote:
>You would have to save it as a draft, then apply the script. The script
>would have to be responsible for sending the message, because you're
>absolutely correct, filters don't get run until after they are sent.
Since some time (PowerMail 5.0 maybe), outgoing filters are a
Alexander Balakersky wrote:
>Unfortunately, I still cannot figure out how to set priority myself on the
>outgoing messages.
Priorities is not something supported in PowerMail, because the sender's
notion of priority is rarely the same as the recipient's, and I'm not
sure there is really a standar
You would have to save it as a draft, then apply the script. The script would
have to be responsible for sending the message, because you're absolutely
correct, filters don't get run until after they are sent.
Wayne
-Original Message-
>From: Alexander Balakersky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Se
Much appreciate it.
One question though, using a script like that with an "Outgoing Mail"
filters. Will that work, or will I still have to save to draft first then
apply a filter, then open and send? I thought that Outgoing Mail filters get
processed after mail is written and send button pressed, s
I guess you are right. Never tried it until now - and it doesn't stick
while sending the message.
Sorry to have caused confusion...
kl.
>
>Are you sure about this? As far as I know, this doesn't write "X-
>Priority" header at all.
>
>-Hiro
>
>
>
Karsten Liere / 2006/09/27 / 12:24 PM wrote:
>For an outgoing message, one has to save it as a draft and select it.
>Then, under the Mail menu, go down to Label and chose the one you need.
>
>Messages in your mailbox are labeled by simply selecting them and
>proceeding as above.
Are you sure abo
I can certainly whip something up like this, however there is a gotcha. All
mail would first have to be saved as a draft because filters don't run until
after an item is sent, so there isn't a way to perform a filter on the message
and there wouldn't be the proper headers before it is saved as a
>> and how to set a priority.
For an outgoing message, one has to save it as a draft and select it.
Then, under the Mail menu, go down to Label and chose the one you need.
Messages in your mailbox are labeled by simply selecting them and
proceeding as above.
Cheers,
kl.
On 9/27/06 at 5:13 PM, Derry Thompson ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) said:
>Simon Troup at [EMAIL PROTECTED] said on Wed, 27 Sep 2006
>16:54:37 +0100
>
>> and how to set a priority.
>
>Dunno that one :)
Simon,
The problem with setting a priority is that not all email clients
support it, or are configured t
Hello everybody.
I am trying to stick with PM as I like it very much, unfortunately, I am
having an issue that will make me switch or loose my job :(
I have figured out how to mark messages with different color according to
their Priority settings (Using Filters on X-Priority, priority, importance
Hi Simon,
>1) When I double click on an HTML attachment Powermail launches it in
>possibly the worlds worst web browser - Internet Explorer Mac (cough) -
>where do I change that?
Safari Preferences can be used to change this. Better yet, run MisFox,
which you'll fine in the 'extras' folder in yo
Simon Troup at [EMAIL PROTECTED] said on Wed, 27 Sep 2006
16:54:37 +0100
>1) When I double click on an HTML attachment Powermail launches it in
>possibly the worlds worst web browser - Internet Explorer Mac (cough) -
>where do I change that?
That's an OS thing. Open your attachments folder. Selec
I'm returning to powermail following a brief switch to MailSmith, now I
find that the long period of inactivity in PM is due to conversion to
Universal (hopefully we can soon start seeing some of those fab features
suggested here) and then hear that MailSmith development is like way
down on the BBS
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