manuel 'fmf' ferrero wrote:
Oh, and can you configure the list so a reply replies to the list and not
just the sender?
No, please.
Read this: http://www.unicom.com/pw/reply-to-harmful.html for more info.
Thanks.
Manuel:
The article is logical. However, when I use Reply All in
Joseph Becher wrote:
The article is logical. However, when I use Reply All in Thunderbird,
you will see my reply twice.
Don't you find that annoying? If I were to use Elm, would the 'g' key
somehow avoid this problem? How would it know?
With 'reply all' or 'g' you
On 9/12/05, joshua schachter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
i'd like to put together a spec for letting users authorize remoteapplication access without giving away their actual password.here's a very preliminary idea:1) remote webapp links to, say,
How about a more radical suggestion:
implement del.icio.us as a distributed database app, where each user holds his
own tag database, and grants permissions to a central site and to other users
through services.
R.
---
Robert E.
On 12/09/05, Robert E Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
How about a more radical suggestion: implement del.icio.us as a distributed
database app, where each user holds his own tag database, and grants
permissions to a central site and to other users through services.
R.
There has already been a lot of discussion about the flickr
athentication process that is documented here:
http://flickr.com/services/api/misc.userauth.html
It seems to be an interesting approach and I think it can be applied
to del.icio.us in the same way as it can be to flickr.
the
Hi All,
On 9/12/05, joshua schachter [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
i'd like to put together a spec for letting users authorize remote
application access without giving away their actual password.
here's a very preliminary idea:
1) remote webapp links to, say, del.icio.us/auth?return=http://
Desktop apps would presumably be trusted by the user (although
obviously still subvert-able ). Just plug in your userid and password.
The auth scheme I am proposing would be for other webapps only.
Joshua
The thing I don't like about these auth schemes, is that it's
web-based. Sounds
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