> Success!!! Doing a complete uninstall of Spambayes and OL2003 > has fixed the problem.
Excellent :) Thanks for letting us know. > Now a question. How should I set OL2003's built in Spam filter? Possibilities: o You can just turn it off - SpamBayes ought to do a better job than it (appropriately trained). Note that you can get SpamBayes to move spam to the Outlook "Junk Mail" folder, so that you can use it's extra capabilities (right-click and delete, and that sort of thing). o Alternatively, you can have it on and have a two-tier spam filtering system. (OL will go first, so you'd have to get SpamBayes to watch the folder that OL moves spam to - that would mean that mail that OL thought was good would be in the inbox, mail that SpamBayes thought was good (but OL didn't) would be in the OL spam folder, mail that SpamBayes thought was unsure (and OL thought was spam) would be in the SpamBayes unsure folder, and mail that both OL and SpamBayes thought was spam would be in the SpamBayes folder). With the 1.1 SpamBayes release (final version will probably be out in April - an alpha release will probably be out this month) you can set SpamBayes to move good mail, too, so you could get it to put mail it thinks is good back in the inbox or wherever. o You could have it move suspected spam to the SpamBayes spam folder, or unsure folder (depending on how much you trusted it). =Tony.Meyer -- Please always include the list ([email protected]) in your replies (reply-all), and please don't send me personal mail about SpamBayes. http://www.massey.ac.nz/~tameyer/writing/reply_all.html explains this. _______________________________________________ [email protected] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/spambayes Check the FAQ before asking: http://spambayes.sf.net/faq.html
