R - elists
2011-Aug-31 04:46 UTC
[CentOS] OT: help with email list reading programs w/ best features to read the centos and other lists that can filter people etc
we need to filter out various peoples posts on this list would some kind soul(s) please direct us in locating the best email list reading programs w/ the best features to read the centos and other lists. the CentOS list signal/noise ratio is so bad that we need something better than just outlook like clients or whatever appropriate windows and linux recommendations would be most appreciated thank you in advance - rh
Christopher Chan
2011-Aug-31 04:58 UTC
[CentOS] OT: help with email list reading programs w/ best features to read the centos and other lists that can filter people etc
On Wednesday, August 31, 2011 12:46 PM, R - elists wrote:> > we need to filter out various peoples posts on this list > > would some kind soul(s) please direct us in locating the best email list > reading programs w/ the best features to read the centos and other lists.It's not an email program but I think it has the best filtering capabilities of all - the brain.> > the CentOS list signal/noise ratio is so bad that we need something better > than just outlook like clients or whateverHuh? What signal/noise ratio? I don't see any of the usual "can't be bother to read manuals/to use google" suspects...unless you're complaining about our most recent top poster...> > appropriate windows and linux recommendations would be most appreciated >How about mutt as a client?
Frank Cox
2011-Aug-31 05:02 UTC
[CentOS] OT: help with email list reading programs w/ best features to read the centos and other lists that can filter people etc
On Tue, 30 Aug 2011 21:46:53 -0700 R - elists wrote:> we need to filter out various peoples posts on this list > > would some kind soul(s) please direct us in locating the best email list > reading programs w/ the best features to read the centos and other lists. > > the CentOS list signal/noise ratio is so bad that we need something better > than just outlook like clients or whateverHello Mr. Elists (or may I call you R?) Most email clients are capable of filtering incoming mail by subject, sender, and other fields. I note that you are using MS Outlook and I have absolutely no experience with that program, but any email client I've used in the past several years has allowed filtering in some manner. My personal favourite email client is Sylpheed (which is available for both Linux and Windows -- you can find a pre-compiled Sylpheed rpm for Centos 5 and Centos 6 on my website if you're interested) and it can easily be used to filter and sort email by just about any field that you choose to use. With Sylpheed, you can set it up to filter "Sender=Whoever" to "Trash" or "Delete from Server" if you want. Just look under the Configuration - Filter Settings menu; it's pretty self-explanatory. -- MELVILLE THEATRE ~ Real D 3D Digital Cinema ~ www.melvilletheatre.com www.creekfm.com - FIFTY THOUSAND WATTS of POW WOW POWER!
wwp
2011-Aug-31 07:54 UTC
[CentOS] OT: help with email list reading programs w/ best features to read the centos and other lists that can filter people etc
Hello R, On Tue, 30 Aug 2011 21:46:53 -0700 "R - elists" <lists07 at abbacomm.net> wrote:> > we need to filter out various peoples posts on this list > > would some kind soul(s) please direct us in locating the best email list > reading programs w/ the best features to read the centos and other lists. > > the CentOS list signal/noise ratio is so bad that we need something better > than just outlook like clients or whatever > > appropriate windows and linux recommendations would be most appreciatedClaws Mail does that work for me for ages. Filtering (dispatching mails, quick filtering view), tagging, coloring, etc.. Regards, -- wwp -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: signature.asc Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 198 bytes Desc: not available URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20110831/8ec1685f/attachment-0002.sig>
Lamar Owen
2011-Aug-31 13:13 UTC
[CentOS] OT: help with email list reading programs w/ best features to read the centos and other lists that can filter people etc
On Wednesday, August 31, 2011 12:46:53 AM R - elists wrote:> we need to filter out various peoples posts on this list> would some kind soul(s) please direct us in locating the best email list > reading programs w/ the best features to read the centos and other lists.While I use Kmail (which can do very powerful filtering based on a number of criteria; I use the filters to folderize the list into its own CentOS folder, in addition to plonking senders), Outlook's junk mail filter can be configured to do what you're after. Or, go to office.microsoft.com, and search for the phrase "Add a name to the Blocked Senders List" and I think you'll find what you want.
Lamar Owen
2011-Aug-31 13:46 UTC
[CentOS] OT: help with email list reading programs w/ best features to read the centos and other lists that can filter people etc
On Wednesday, August 31, 2011 09:25:06 AM m.roth at 5-cent.us wrote:> Lamar Owen wrote: > > On Wednesday, August 31, 2011 12:46:53 AM R - elists wrote: > <snip> > > While I use Kmail (which can do very powerful filtering based on a number > <snip> > So how is kmail these days?Kmail beats the Dickens out of me sometimes.... A tale of two mailreaders.... 'It was the best of times, it was the worst of times...' It's been better (in ways), and it's been worse (much worse). The Scalix integration quit working upon an upgrade to KDE4 (don't really miss it that much), and if you do a large and long search, be sure to do a short one before you quit kmail, as it will redo the search to populate the 'Searches' folder *every time you start* and not tell you that is what it is doing; it just feels like it has hung, for however long the search may take (and my mail store is, uh, 8.3GB currently) ... At the KDE SC 4.6.x level, things are about as stable as they've ever been, once you get Akonadi and Nepomuk operable. But this is the primary reason I'm somewhat loathe to go back down to KDE 4.3.4 in EL 6; I've forgotten what was broken at that level, and I'm used to what is currently working in F14.... which is partly why I'll periodically pop up and ask if anyone has done a KDE 4.6.x repo for EL6... I'm at the moment happy with 1.13.7 that ships with KDE SC 4.6.5. It's crashed the least of any kmail I've run, since a long time ago (I forget just when I went to kmail (from Netscape Communicator), but it was, IIRC, in KDE 1.x days). I've kept essentially the same mailstore the whole time; it is a melange of maildir and mbox, depending upon how old the folder is... :-)
Lamar Owen
2011-Aug-31 13:49 UTC
[CentOS] OT: help with email list reading programs w/ best features to read the centos and other lists that can filter people etc
On Wednesday, August 31, 2011 09:34:48 AM Always Learning wrote:> Why not store them in a correspondence database ?Kmail is working towards full Akonadi integration, and the full 'semantic desktop' paradigm is (or will be) available. So it's already being done, to a degree, and in a very flexible manner. Currently it is a tad slow with my >1 million e-mails in my archive, but it has been slower. Much slower.
Les Mikesell
2011-Aug-31 14:58 UTC
[CentOS] OT: help with email list reading programs w/ best features to read the centos and other lists that can filter people etc
On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 11:46 PM, R - elists <lists07 at abbacomm.net> wrote:> > we need to filter out various peoples posts on this list > > would some kind soul(s) please direct us in locating the best email list > reading programs w/ the best features to read the centos and other lists. > > the CentOS list signal/noise ratio is so bad that we need something better > than just outlook like clients or whatever > > appropriate windows and linux recommendations would be most appreciated >I didn't expect this, but I am beginning to like gmail's web interface better than dedicated mail programs. I used to use fetchmail to pull it to an imap server that I managed and accessed from various clients and my phone via imap, but for an assortment of reasons I want to retire that server and recently have been accessing gmail directly through imap, the gmail phone app, and the web interface, and after configuring the options a bit the web interface seems to be winning. It now has a fuzzy concept of 'important' mail that it can display first, and its folder operations are conceptually more like tagging where 'inbox' is just another tag, although from imap they appear as typical folders. The normal thing to do with disposed mail is to 'archive' it which puts it out of sight, but it still appears in searches and threaded conversation view - and being google, they obviously have better search capability than you are going to find in your own mail client. For me, the conceptual differences are more than making up for what you lose in a web-based interface - and when you want you can always use a real client via imap as long as you don't subscribe to the massive 'all mail' folder that holds the archive. I don't do any pre-filtering or sorting since you can just archive everything and still be able to find it in a search, but the facility is there if you want it and the results appear the same via multiple imap clients, the phone app, or the web interface. And yes, I know it is all just a ploy to get you to stay logged in all the time in the browser so your google search queries are tied to your login as well as your IP, but they are really, really good at it... -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell at gmail.com
Kenneth Porter
2011-Sep-04 00:36 UTC
[CentOS] OT: help with email list reading programs w/ best features to read the centos and other lists that can filter people etc
--On Tuesday, August 30, 2011 10:46 PM -0700 R - elists <lists07 at abbacomm.net> wrote:> would some kind soul(s) please direct us in locating the best email list > reading programs w/ the best features to read the centos and other lists.My CentOS box is my mail server. It uses procmail as the delivery agent, so it honors the .procmailrc filter in every user's home directory. I use that to pre-deliver list mail to list-specific folders in my ~/mail hierarchy (~/Maildir if you use Maildir format) and then read the result with the Mulberry mail client and Dovecot as the IMAP server. It should be straightforward to add additional filter rules to .procmailrc to either remove mail from selected senders or add flags that your email client would understand to hide or highlight. (I set the "important" flag to highlight messages from project administrators and messages that contain my address in the references headers (ie. replies to me).