Le 29/05/2018 à 01h35, Ángel a écrit :
> On 2018-05-28 at 23:21 +0200, Garreau, Alexandre wrote:
>> On 2018-05-28 at 15:40, Adam Tauno Williams wrote:
>> > Reply-To-List is the only option anyone should ever use, IMNSHO. Doing
>> > anything else is bad netiquette.
>>
>> Really? When beginning
On 2018-05-28 at 23:21 +0200, Garreau, Alexandre wrote:
> On 2018-05-28 at 15:40, Adam Tauno Williams wrote:
> > Reply-To-List is the only option anyone should ever use, IMNSHO. Doing
> > anything else is bad netiquette.
>
> Really? When beginning first to use mailing lists I was curious about
>
On 2018-05-28 at 15:40, Adam Tauno Williams wrote:
>> “reply in private to the list, outside of the knowledge of eventual
>> participants). The problem here is “reply to the list” is not the
>> canonical standard thing most people will want to do, it is just the
>> complementary opposite of “reply
> “reply in private to the list, outside of the knowledge of eventual
> participants). The problem here is “reply to the list” is not the
> canonical standard thing most people will want to do, it is just the
> complementary opposite of “reply privately to the sender”: “reply
> privately to the
Hi,
Recently I received a mail from Evolution, and as I recalled it a bit
(it was my first ever free-software mail user-agent! ^^ which I always
recommanded at the time I still used GNOME), I subsequently retried it
to inspect its behavior.
In both occurence I noted the usage of, non-standard as
Hi,
Recently I missed a mail, for only some days fortunately, but knowing
myself I might have missed a lot more this way: this mail was an answer
on a mailing list, to a mail I sent there, and it didn’t include me in
either the “To:” nor the “Cc:” header, thought the user (whose
Hi,
I justed wanted to say that I was astonished by Evolution working out of
the box with all the mails I stored using Gnus Emacs “nnml” backend,
which, as far as I remember, is like “nnmh” (or also “nnspool”, say the
documentation) backend, except it has “.overview” files to index files
and