>Thus said Ralph Corderoy on Sun, 22 Feb 2015 19:07:06 +0000: > >> You guess wrong. It is useful. I'm declaring what's valid and >> interested parties can use it, and I've seen they do, to help judge >> what they've received. > >By the way, my apologies for using your domain as an example. I could >have just as easily setup a separate subdomain for this test. I was so >surprised to actually find a domain that used -all that I immediately >put on my ``for science'' hat and proceeded to test.
FWIW, it seems to me that since Bob is reporting that more and more of his email is being marked as spam, that would be a pretty big indication that there is a problem. Right or wrong, it seems to me that the days of submitting email via a server that does not match your From: header are slowly coming to an end. It occurs to me that if you want to send to different servers based on your From: header, a customized postproc would be pretty trivial to whip up. >> (BTW, fully-justified text to 72 characters on a TTY is a pain to >> read, especially when long `words' are common meaning every space has >> to be two spaces on some lines, presumably more sometimes.) > >Interesting observation. I've always found it to be the opposite and >you're actually the first to have mentioned it. At least for me, I find >that having the text wrapped at odd places, or not wrapped at >all depending on the terminal/software displaying it, is much more >difficult. I didn't want to say anything and forgive me for piling on ... but I did notice right away that your messages felt "odd" and I had to look at it closer to figure it out. At least for me, it's ... well, I'm not sure "harder" is the right word. "Stranger" is a little bit closer. --Ken _______________________________________________ Nmh-workers mailing list [email protected] https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/nmh-workers
