Hi Charlie,
I thought about this a bit more and in reality, the way I handled messages with
Apple Mail isn’t functionally much different from the way it would work with
MM...
With Apple Mail, I save message to a variety of local mailboxes basically
organized by topic. I did this in an effort
On 26 Aug 2020, at 22:51, Antonio Leding wrote:
I can see this as a desired option if one wants all of their mail on
the local machine…but I have a different use-case…
I presume many users do the same thing I do which is that some or most
of their mail is on the server and then some is
On 26 Aug 2020, at 13:42, Antonio Leding wrote:
Hello all — Thank you very much for your responses…the feedback is
very helpful. I also use C-Command’s SpamSieve and EagleFiler
products as both are phenomenal at what they do. Talking specifically
about EagleFiler, I personally looked at
On 26 Aug 2020, at 20:07, Charlie Garrison wrote:
On 27 Aug 2020, at 3:42, Antonio Leding wrote:
I must admit that while I have already setup a few accounts in MM, I
had not yet noticed that in-app local message storage was not
available (just hadn’t tried it yet) so thank you for educating
On 27 Aug 2020, at 3:42, Antonio Leding wrote:
I must admit that while I have already setup a few accounts in MM, I
had not yet noticed that in-app local message storage was not
available (just hadn’t tried it yet) so thank you for educating me
there. With that in mind, does anyone know why
On Aug 26, 2020, at 1:24 PM, Michael Nietzold
wrote:
>
> If you really need a local storage:
>
> - how about running a local imap server on your Mac?
I can see this as a desired option if one wants all of their mail on the local
machine…but I have a different use-case…
I presume many
On 26 Aug 2020, at 16:24, Michael Nietzold wrote:
If you really need a local storage:
- how about running a local imap server on your Mac?
This is what I do (dovecot), but as someone who isn’t as technically
savvy as it seems many or most people on this list are, it was a bit of
a
If you really need a local storage:
- how about running a local imap server on your Mac?
Von meinem iDingens gesendet...
>> Am 26.08.2020 um 19:42 schrieb Antonio Leding :
> Hello all — Thank you very much for your responses…the feedback is very
> helpful. I also use C-Command’s SpamSieve
Hello all — Thank you very much for your responses…the feedback is very
helpful. I also use C-Command’s SpamSieve and EagleFiler products as both are
phenomenal at what they do. Talking specifically about EagleFiler, I
personally looked at several different methods and apps for email
On 26 Aug 2020, at 10:55, Philip Paeps wrote:
On 2020-08-26 06:20:56 (+0800), Antonio Leding wrote:
My core questions would be around performance (I have well over 150k
messages across 12 email accounts), reliability, SpamSieve
functionality, things you wish you’d known before migrating, etc.
On 2020-08-26 06:20:56 (+0800), Antonio Leding wrote:
My core questions would be around performance (I have well over 150k
messages across 12 email accounts), reliability, SpamSieve
functionality, things you wish you’d known before migrating, etc.
I wouldn't worry about performance or
I hit the brick wall with Apple Mail in February. It slowed my
two-year-old iMac down to the point of unusability.
There are two issues that I see with using MailMate vs. using Apple
Mail. The first is that MM organizes emails differently than Mail. When
you want to file an email, you move it
On 26 Aug 2020, at 0:20, Antonio Leding wrote:
Hello all,
After many years of using Apple Mail, I have hit a dead-end with
regard to both performance and search-ability. I have always heard
great things about Mailmate but because Mail was working well —
coupled with a fair bit of inertia —
On 26 Aug 2020, at 0:20, Antonio Leding wrote:
My core questions would be around performance (I have well over 150k
messages across 12 email accounts), reliability, SpamSieve
functionality, things you wish you’d known before migrating, etc.
I have a similar setup as the one you are
Hello all,
After many years of using Apple Mail, I have hit a dead-end with regard
to both performance and search-ability. I have always heard great
things about Mailmate but because Mail was working well — coupled with
a fair bit of inertia — I never took the time to really take a look at
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