Yahoo forwarded through a mailing list and then hitting gmail - gmail thinks it 
sees yahoo mail but coming from my server 

There's a known fix but it requires a mailing list server upgrade among other 
things for me to implement it 

--srs

> On 04-Aug-2016, at 12:14 AM, Mahesh Murthy <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Hi Simmi
> 
> Your Yahoo address is not verified - whatever that means.
> 
> That seems to be setting off Gmail spam filters.
> 
> See screenshot attached
> 
>> On 03-Aug-2016 4:56 PM, "Simmi Sareen" <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> 
>>    On Wednesday, August 3, 2016 11:42 AM, Rajesh Mehar <
>> [email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> I would like everyone's thoughts on these two links below, and the idea
>> that without net energy consumption reduction (through de-industrialization
>> and reduction of automation, probably Luddite ideas in a group such as
>> Silk) there is no long term benefit from switching to so-called-renewables.
>> 
>> How Sustainable is Solar Power?
>> 
>> http://www.lowtechmagazine.com/2015/04/how-sustainable-is-pv-solar-power.html#more
>> 
>> It's certainly true that a dynamic lifecycle analysis of solar PV carbon
>> footprint would look much worse today than it did in 2008. But I believe
>> things are set to get better from here. If we look at the two sided
>> equation (carbon cost of manufacturing and shipping panels and returns from
>> deploying these panels), the first is permanently altered. There is no way
>> manufacturing can move away from low cost Taiwanese and Korean players.
>> However, deployment patterns will see a massive shift with more than 50% of
>> capacity additions from now to 2025 coming from China and India.
>> It is also a tad over-simplistic to position solar only as a replacement
>> for grid connected thermal power. No matter how fast the capacity addition
>> or how low the panel cost, high solar storage costs will ensure that solar
>> and conventional power continues to co-exist for a very long time.
>> Solar has also proven to be a accretive solution. Take, for instance, the
>> 60 million Indian households with no access to electricity. Conventional
>> grid is too expensive to build here, micro wind and biogas have both been
>> ineffective so  solar micro-grids are the only way these villagers are
>> going to get lights, fans and mobile chargers. If a slightly higher carbon
>> footprint but a significantly lower cost from Chinese manufacturers makes
>> this solution possible, it's a huge benefit.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 


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