On Thu, Sep 28, 2006 at 12:27 am +0100, Simon Troup wrote:
As a rather trivial example, when I post to this mailing list from my
home mac (I'm at work right now using a Windoze machine) I normally use
a signature which contains my system stats, including PowerMail version.
As one might expect, I
Tim Hodgson:
Sorry - that was rather a terse reply! The filter runs an Applescript if
'To' contains 'powermail-discuss'. The script is:
Brilliant! I've wanted functionality like that for ages.
It's great just to be able to do it, but it would be a lot easier if
Apply Signature was in the drop
Hello everybody.
I am trying to stick with PM as I like it very much, unfortunately, I am
having an issue that will make me switch or loose my job :(
I have figured out how to mark messages with different color according to
their Priority settings (Using Filters on X-Priority, priority,
when I get a chance.
Wayne
-Original Message-
From: Alexander Balakersky [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sep 27, 2006 11:22 AM
To: PowerMail discussions powermail-discuss@ctmdev.com
Subject: Message priority
Hello everybody.
I am trying to stick with PM as I like it very much, unfortunately, I am
powermail-discuss@ctmdev.com
Subject: Message priority
Hello everybody.
I am trying to stick with PM as I like it very much, unfortunately, I am
having an issue that will make me switch or loose my job :(
I have figured out how to mark messages with different color according to
their Priority
Alexander Balakersky wrote:
Unfortunately, I still cannot figure out how to set priority myself on the
outgoing messages.
Priorities is not something supported in PowerMail, because the sender's
notion of priority is rarely the same as the recipient's, and I'm not
sure there is really a standard
Wayne Brissette wrote:
You would have to save it as a draft, then apply the script. The script
would have to be responsible for sending the message, because you're
absolutely correct, filters don't get run until after they are sent.
Since some time (PowerMail 5.0 maybe), outgoing filters are
Since some time (PowerMail 5.0 maybe), outgoing filters are applied
before sending, so they can change the account, add a BCC recipient and
other useful things.
Just goes to show you how I've let my scripting with PM languish.
Thanks Jérôme!
Wayne
While I agree that notions of priority are never the same between sender and
recipient, most software (and believe me, I've tried most if not all) on
windows and mac has the option of setting message priority. Whether you use
it is up to you, but it is there if you need it. Even mail.app has
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 9/27/2006 3:53 PM, PowerMail Engineering wrote:
Wayne Brissette wrote:
You would have to save it as a draft, then apply the script. The script
would have to be responsible for sending the message, because you're
absolutely correct, filters
Tim Lapin wrote:
Does this mean I can associate a particular signature with a given
recipient in the To: field? (assuming only one To: recipient)
Yes
Jérôme - PowerMail Engineering
-
I'm using Powermail for years now. I
Signatures specifically assigned to an account I use often, for example
I only add my name and no quotations, addresses, phone numbers etc.
when I respond to a list - yes, I like it clean and simple and after
seeing somebody's 15 line long information footer it gets boring for me
to glance over
As a rather trivial example, when I post to this mailing list from my
home mac (I'm at work right now using a Windoze machine) I normally use
a signature which contains my system stats, including PowerMail version.
As one might expect, I don't always remember to do this.
Neither did I, so I now
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