You know, I didn't notice this before ... but is this your actual From:
header? Or just part of the obfuscation you did?
From: Bob Carragher dnc2...@gmail.com dnc2...@gmail.com
--Ken
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On Mar 3, 2015, at 3:29 PM, hy...@lactose.homelinux.net wrote:
In theory, I just want a small one-way distribution list of people I
need to send an email to about once or twice a month, and having their
names in a text file is much easier to maintain than using actual
mailing list software.
On Mar 3, 2015, at 7:19 PM, Ken Hornstein k...@pobox.com wrote:
I can tell you from experience that a number of mail servers will
categorically reject that as spam, Gmail being one of them.
And my categorical response is: fuck gmail.
--lyndon
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So, it turns out this is pretty easy to do; attached is the postproc
wrapper I cooked up to send to different mail servers based on the
From address. Of course, you could really use any algorithm you want;
this is just an example. I can't claim this is perfect, but I think
it's a good first
debian's exmh uses run-mailcap, which is the only thing we can depend on
to be available. after all not everybody has (or wants) lynx installed,
or libreoffice or insert mime handler of your personal choice
which everybody else hates.
i'd say the clean debianish solution for delegating mime
Hi Alexander,
Thanks for taking an interest..
Alexander the only difference between upstream's mhn.defaults and the
Alexander one shipped with debian's nmh are the 4+6 lines for mime
Alexander types application/postscript, /msword, /pdf, image/*
Alexander (upstream and too specific) vs the
On Mon, 02 Mar 2015 17:51:22 +, Conrad Hughes writes:
Debian's version sends
everything (although sometimes there's no-such-file, causing
failures) to GUI helper applications, which feels like something of
a regression vs 1.5 behaviour.
debian's exmh uses run-mailcap, which is the