On Sat, 16 Nov 2024 16:53:50 +0000, Conrad Hughes via "Discussion of nmh
development, and help for new users" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Thanks for the responses on this; I tried the w3m/lynx/elinks defaults
> and none solved my specific problem (which basically comes down to
> whether the browser looks at CSS I suspect), but at least lynx manages
> to reliably render to 80 columns on an 80-column terminal, so I've
> switched from w3m to that.
>
> Looks as if I might need something like brow.sh (which somehow renders
> Firefox output in a terminal window) in order to suppress the styled-
> out summary paragraph, but installing that looks like effort, and it may
> no longer be maintained.
>
> Paul's idea of invoking a GUI app for a with-images version of things is
> also a good one: it's rare enough that I currently just manually
> `mhstore` and invoke a browser on whatever that produces, but automating
> the process would be smart.
I've been using [N]MH as my choice in email at home since before the turn
of the century. I used it at work before then.
I've been doing the fetchmail from my web email service to local and then
reading/sending email from my local Linux machine.
Over the years I've used many different graphical front-ends as the world
moved from terminals to xterms to *term (today). Originally I used xmh,
then exmh, and for the last 10+ yrs I've used Sylpheed. Sylpheed isn't an
nmh only GUI, but it has support for it. One of the key features is that
it can shows the different parts of a message - and will show the non-rendered
html as ascii. Jpgs and png are rendered in the message window.
If you want the whole HTML experience, you can double left-click on the HTML
part and it will open a new tab in a browser of choice (sans jpg / png
attached to the message)
These days I'm using Vivaldi - all running on Linux.
>
> Best,
> Conrad
>
jerry
--
// Jerry Heyman | "Human beings are born with different
// Amigan Forever :-) | capacities. If they are free, they are
\\ // heymanj at acm dot org | not equal. And if they are equal, they
\X/ | they are not free" - A. Solzhenitsyn