On 29 Sep 2014, at 15:04, John Cooper wrote:
I'm confused, but maybe it's because I've never used mute functionality before using MailMate. What is the implication of the last statement--that emails addressed directly to you will no longer be exempted from the mute, or that they no longer will be muted?
Muting was implemented to be used on mailing lists where you would not normally be the direct recipient. For example, the message you just sent was from you to `[email protected]`. If I had muted the thread then I would not have seen it. But if you had replied to my email address directly then I would still have seen the message due to the exception described.
My understanding of "mute" is that it automatically marks further messages in the same thread as read. I would expect it to do this regardless of whether my address is in the To: field. However, the Mute command has never had any effect on further messages when I use it in MailMate, so I'm trying to determine how my understanding is incomplete.
I assume that in this case the thread is a thread of personal correspondence in which you are an explicit recipient (although maybe one of many explicit recipients). This is more like what I would name “blocking” since someone is writing to you, but you don't want to see what this someone is writing to you.
And this is the first I've heard of "strong muting" as opposed to normal muting.
Well, strong muting is perhaps what you would expect from muting, but you run the risk of muting too much.
I hope that makes it a bit more clear. -- Benny
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