Okay, this is drifting way off-topic, but I'll give it one last shot...
Andre Berger wrote:
> Adam C Powell IV <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Andre Berger wrote:
> >
> > But that's the problem- it tries to get the new mail anyway sometimes when
> > I switch
> > folders! I'd just use something else, but I like Netscape; hopefully
> > Mozilla will solve
> > my problems. :-)
>
> I don't really understand what you mean by "switch folders"?
When you're looking at emails in one folder, and decide to look at emails in
another folder,
so you click the other folder- that's what I mean. About 20% of the time
(pretty randomly
from what I can tell), this generates a "download new messages" request, even
if check
messages and download new mail are both turned off!
> BTW, I think spruce is a better "Messenger" than Netscrape's will ever be.
What's spruce? Maybe I have something else to learn from you... A URL?
What I like about Netscrape:
* HTML mail. Yes, I admit it, I'm just non-geeky enough to like it. Partly
because
I like to be able to see things in proportional font, and resize the
viewing window and
have it wrap accordingly, without leaving ugly blank spaces every other
line because of
bad line division. Partly because I can embed links and pictures in text
I send (no,
I never send pictures to a list!), and some formatting- tables are really
nice, even if
I'm going to lose the pretty borders by having it convert to plain text
before sending.
(This is a <UL> list converted to plain text.) Also, Netscape doesn't
embed <FONT>
tags, allowing the reader control over fonts, unlike that other HTML mail
client...
* Integration with the browser: links in HTML mail, and more importantly
URLs in plain
text mail, are blue underlined and clicking them takes me to the page.
* Nice eye-pleasing 3-pane GUI.
* Decent searching, recursively through subfolders, decent options, etc.
* Easy drag-n-drop filing into folders.
* Marking messages as flagged for later perusing of the best messages in my
local archive
of a list, etc.
* Nice, easy-to-use filtering.
* Decent one-click spell checking.
* Easy quoting of multiple messages, e.g. click reply on message A, click
and read message
B in the messenger, click "quote" in the mail composer to quote message B
into the
message A reply.
* Drag-'n-drop attachments.
* Options pane with checkbuttons for things like: uuencode instead of MIME
attacments,
Verisign [ugh, wish there was GPG] encryption/signing, return receipt.
* Local address book or external LDAP completion of partial addresses,
drag-n-drop
addressing.
If spruce can provide a lot of these without Netscape's drawbacks, then I'm
open to
switching! (Also looking forward to Mozilla and/or Evolution...)
Zeen,
-Adam P.