I get tons of e-mails daily, across multiple addresses I frequently
monitor throughout any given day. I currently have my e-mail client
program set-up to only have a "list" view of the subject line of all
incoming mail, grouping all e-mail addresses (i.e., utilizing Apple's
Mail software). And, I'm assuming that many of the subscribers on
this mailing list also do the same thing. Since I am often bombarded
with unwanted spam, the majority of the time, I only quickly read the
"subject line" of an e-mail, and delete questionable incoming mail,
without wasting time to actual read every single e-mail to determine
if it is desired content to read, or not.
So, as a request for this e-mail list, can the list admin re-
configure the list settings, so that all messages sent automatically
prepend in the subject line the tag: [RoundCube Dev]. That way,
incoming mail can be easily identified as not spam, and should be
read accordingly. If the list settings do not feature an auto-prepend
for the subject line, then this request is widely directed to all
subscribers of this list, asking that when composing new e-mails,
please be more conscious about the content of the subject line, and
to write text that at least can give some indication that the e-mail
pertains to RoundCube.
Example:
A bad subject line would just have:
Subject: RC1
Whereas, a better subject line would have:
Subject: RoundCube RC1
Oftentimes, messages are being sent through this list, where the
subject line does not clearly give indication that it is referring to
RoundCube. And, i wouldn't want to accidently delete a potentially
vital incoming e-mail from this list, thinking it was spam.
Thanks.
All Knight Access Be somebody without selling your soul. www.allknightacccess.com
In case you didn't know, it's on a user-by-user basis. I suggest you read this:
Options
Send a message with 'options' in both subject and body to: dev+options@lists.roundcube.net mailto:users+options@lists.roundcube.net and follow the link in the reply message. Available subscription options are:
Set Reply-To This will add a Reply-To: header field to the messages you receive from the list, directing replies back to the list instead of the message originator. Messages with a Reply-To: header field already present will not have it replaced. Tag Subject Add a [RoundCube Dev] tag to all Subject: header fields. Some people find this useful to (automatically of visually) sort mailing list messages. Suspend Mailing Stop sending list messages to this address. Use this if you want to temporarily halt your subscription (such as when going on holiday) or if you want to be able to post from several addresses without having list messages sent to all of them.
Hope that helps.
~Brett
All Knight Access wrote:
I get tons of e-mails daily, across multiple addresses I frequently monitor throughout any given day. I currently have my e-mail client program set-up to only have a "list" view of the subject line of all incoming mail, grouping all e-mail addresses (i.e., utilizing Apple's Mail software). And, I'm assuming that many of the subscribers on this mailing list also do the same thing. Since I am often bombarded with unwanted spam, the majority of the time, I only quickly read the "subject line" of an e-mail, and delete questionable incoming mail, without wasting time to actual read every single e-mail to determine if it is desired content to read, or not.
So, as a request for this e-mail list, can the list admin re-configure the list settings, so that all messages sent automatically prepend in the subject line the tag: [RoundCube Dev]. That way, incoming mail can be easily identified as not spam, and should be read accordingly. If the list settings do not feature an auto-prepend for the subject line, then this request is widely directed to all subscribers of this list, asking that when composing new e-mails, please be more conscious about the content of the subject line, and to write text that at least can give some indication that the e-mail pertains to RoundCube.
Example:
A bad subject line would just have:
Subject: RC1
Whereas, a better subject line would have:
Subject: RoundCube RC1
Oftentimes, messages are being sent through this list, where the subject line does not clearly give indication that it is referring to RoundCube. And, i wouldn't want to accidently delete a potentially vital incoming e-mail from this list, thinking it was spam.
Thanks.
All Knight Access Be somebody without selling your soul. www.allknightacccess.com
Have you considered setting up a mail filter that will move all emails sent to dev@lists.roundcube.net into a Roundcube folder? Much easier than changing the list configuration, and that way you can easily see what emails were sent to this list and therefore not spam.
Rob
On Fri, 8 Jun 2007 17:48:08 -0400, All Knight Access developer-support@allknightaccess.com wrote:
I get tons of e-mails daily, across multiple addresses I frequently monitor throughout any given day. I currently have my e-mail client program set-up to only have a "list" view of the subject line of all incoming mail, grouping all e-mail addresses (i.e., utilizing Apple's Mail software). And, I'm assuming that many of the subscribers on this mailing list also do the same thing. Since I am often bombarded with unwanted spam, the majority of the time, I only quickly read the "subject line" of an e-mail, and delete questionable incoming mail, without wasting time to actual read every single e-mail to determine if it is desired content to read, or not.
So, as a request for this e-mail list, can the list admin re- configure the list settings, so that all messages sent automatically prepend in the subject line the tag: [RoundCube Dev]. That way, incoming mail can be easily identified as not spam, and should be read accordingly. If the list settings do not feature an auto-prepend for the subject line, then this request is widely directed to all subscribers of this list, asking that when composing new e-mails, please be more conscious about the content of the subject line, and to write text that at least can give some indication that the e-mail pertains to RoundCube.
Example:
A bad subject line would just have:
Subject: RC1
Whereas, a better subject line would have:
Subject: RoundCube RC1
Oftentimes, messages are being sent through this list, where the subject line does not clearly give indication that it is referring to RoundCube. And, i wouldn't want to accidently delete a potentially vital incoming e-mail from this list, thinking it was spam.
Thanks.
All Knight Access Be somebody without selling your soul. www.allknightacccess.com
!DSPAM:1694,4669cec1149671088212976!
No, I wasn't aware of the available per user options. Thanks for the
info. This is what i was in need of.
On Jun 8, 2007, at 5:52 PM, Brett Patterson wrote:
In case you didn't know, it's on a user-by-user basis. I suggest
you read this:Options
Send a message with 'options' in both subject and body to: dev +options@lists.roundcube.net <mailto:users +options@lists.roundcube.net> and follow the link in the reply
message. Available subscription options are:Set Reply-To This will add a Reply-To: header field to the messages you receive from the list, directing replies back to the list instead of the message originator. Messages with a Reply-To: header field already present will not have it replaced. Tag Subject Add a [RoundCube Dev] tag to all Subject: header fields. Some
people find this useful to (automatically of visually) sort mailing list messages. Suspend Mailing Stop sending list messages to this address. Use this if you want to temporarily halt your subscription (such as when going on holiday) or if you want to be able to post from several addresses without having list messages sent to all of them. Hope that helps.~Brett
All Knight Access wrote:
I get tons of e-mails daily, across multiple addresses I
frequently monitor throughout any given day. I currently have my e- mail client program set-up to only have a "list" view of the
subject line of all incoming mail, grouping all e-mail addresses
(i.e., utilizing Apple's Mail software). And, I'm assuming that
many of the subscribers on this mailing list also do the same
thing. Since I am often bombarded with unwanted spam, the majority
of the time, I only quickly read the "subject line" of an e-mail,
and delete questionable incoming mail, without wasting time to
actual read every single e-mail to determine if it is desired
content to read, or not.So, as a request for this e-mail list, can the list admin re- configure the list settings, so that all messages sent
automatically prepend in the subject line the tag: [RoundCube
Dev]. That way, incoming mail can be easily identified as not
spam, and should be read accordingly. If the list settings do not
feature an auto-prepend for the subject line, then this request is
widely directed to all subscribers of this list, asking that when
composing new e-mails, please be more conscious about the content
of the subject line, and to write text that at least can give some
indication that the e-mail pertains to RoundCube. Example:A bad subject line would just have:
Subject: RC1
Whereas, a better subject line would have:
Subject: RoundCube RC1
Oftentimes, messages are being sent through this list, where the
subject line does not clearly give indication that it is referring
to RoundCube. And, i wouldn't want to accidently delete a
potentially vital incoming e-mail from this list, thinking it was
spam.Thanks.
All Knight Access Be somebody without selling your soul. www.allknightacccess.com
All Knight Access Be somebody without selling your soul. www.allknightacccess.com
Glad to help.
~Brett
All Knight Access wrote:
No, I wasn't aware of the available per user options. Thanks for the info. This is what i was in need of.
On Jun 8, 2007, at 5:52 PM, Brett Patterson wrote:
In case you didn't know, it's on a user-by-user basis. I suggest you read this:
Options
Send a message with 'options' in both subject and body to: dev+options@lists.roundcube.net mailto:users+options@lists.roundcube.net and follow the link in the reply message. Available subscription options are:
Set Reply-To This will add a Reply-To: header field to the messages you receive from the list, directing replies back to the list instead of the message originator. Messages with a Reply-To: header field already present will not have it replaced. Tag Subject Add a [RoundCube Dev] tag to all Subject: header fields. Some people find this useful to (automatically of visually) sort mailing list messages. Suspend Mailing Stop sending list messages to this address. Use this if you want to temporarily halt your subscription (such as when going on holiday) or if you want to be able to post from several addresses without having list messages sent to all of them. Hope that helps.
~Brett
All Knight Access wrote:
I get tons of e-mails daily, across multiple addresses I frequently monitor throughout any given day. I currently have my e-mail client program set-up to only have a "list" view of the subject line of all incoming mail, grouping all e-mail addresses (i.e., utilizing Apple's Mail software). And, I'm assuming that many of the subscribers on this mailing list also do the same thing. Since I am often bombarded with unwanted spam, the majority of the time, I only quickly read the "subject line" of an e-mail, and delete questionable incoming mail, without wasting time to actual read every single e-mail to determine if it is desired content to read, or not.
So, as a request for this e-mail list, can the list admin re-configure the list settings, so that all messages sent automatically prepend in the subject line the tag: [RoundCube Dev]. That way, incoming mail can be easily identified as not spam, and should be read accordingly. If the list settings do not feature an auto-prepend for the subject line, then this request is widely directed to all subscribers of this list, asking that when composing new e-mails, please be more conscious about the content of the subject line, and to write text that at least can give some indication that the e-mail pertains to RoundCube. Example:
A bad subject line would just have:
Subject: RC1
Whereas, a better subject line would have:
Subject: RoundCube RC1
Oftentimes, messages are being sent through this list, where the subject line does not clearly give indication that it is referring to RoundCube. And, i wouldn't want to accidently delete a potentially vital incoming e-mail from this list, thinking it was spam.
Thanks.
All Knight Access Be somebody without selling your soul. www.allknightacccess.com
All Knight Access Be somebody without selling your soul. www.allknightacccess.com
Hi,
On 6/9/07, All Knight Access developer-support@allknightaccess.com wrote:
No, I wasn't aware of the available per user options. Thanks for the info. This is what i was in need of.
The Apple Mail MUA also provides rules inside the application - of course this wouldn't apply on your webmail (you need server side rules then), but it would work in your client.
You could also setup a "Smart Mailbox".
Cheers, Till
Or you could just install Opera which groups mailing lists for easy access
and filtering as well as threading the conversations.
Personally I use Opera for mail and Roundcube on the road. Designs like
Opera's mail kind of makes Outlook look like a primitive piece of bloat
(lol not that im saying anyone here uses it) :)
On Sat, 09 Jun 2007 08:26:10 +1000, till klimpong@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
On 6/9/07, All Knight Access developer-support@allknightaccess.com
wrote:No, I wasn't aware of the available per user options. Thanks for the info. This is what i was in need of.
The Apple Mail MUA also provides rules inside the application - of course this wouldn't apply on your webmail (you need server side rules then), but it would work in your client.
You could also setup a "Smart Mailbox".
Cheers, Till
Hi,
On 6/9/07, Chris Fordham chris@xhost.com.au wrote:
Or you could just install Opera which groups mailing lists for easy access and filtering as well as threading the conversations. Personally I use Opera for mail and Roundcube on the road. Designs like Opera's mail kind of makes Outlook look like a primitive piece of bloat (lol not that im saying anyone here uses it) :)
For relatively easy collaboration - and hey, almost every student today knows how office (and essentially outlook) work - outlook is the way to go. I mean, for people who don't have Exchange or an Exchange-like backend it's easy to share calendars, tasks and so on.
I am basically stuck on Thunderbird and Co - at least I haven't found a suitable solution yet.
Till
On Sat, 09 Jun 2007 22:06:51 +1000, till klimpong@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
On 6/9/07, Chris Fordham chris@xhost.com.au wrote:
Or you could just install Opera which groups mailing lists for easy
access and filtering as well as threading the conversations. Personally I use Opera for mail and Roundcube on the road. Designs like Opera's mail kind of makes Outlook look like a primitive piece of bloat (lol not that im saying anyone here uses it) :)For relatively easy collaboration - and hey, almost every student today knows how office (and essentially outlook) work - outlook is the way to go. I mean, for people who don't have Exchange or an Exchange-like backend it's easy to share calendars, tasks and so on.
Lol. This isn't even close to real groupware! :)
I am basically stuck on Thunderbird and Co - at least I haven't found a suitable solution yet.
I dont' think there is one out there :(
Till
On 6/12/07, Chris Fordham chris@xhost.com.au wrote:
On Sat, 09 Jun 2007 22:06:51 +1000, till klimpong@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
On 6/9/07, Chris Fordham chris@xhost.com.au wrote:
Or you could just install Opera which groups mailing lists for easy access and filtering as well as threading the conversations. Personally I use Opera for mail and Roundcube on the road. Designs like Opera's mail kind of makes Outlook look like a primitive piece of bloat (lol not that im saying anyone here uses it) :)
For relatively easy collaboration - and hey, almost every student today knows how office (and essentially outlook) work - outlook is the way to go. I mean, for people who don't have Exchange or an Exchange-like backend it's easy to share calendars, tasks and so on.
Lol. This isn't even close to real groupware! :)
Of course it's not. But distributing tasks and sharing calenders works using Outlook standalone. Certainly not pretty, but it works for many. :)
I am basically stuck on Thunderbird and Co - at least I haven't found a suitable solution yet.
I dont' think there is one out there :(
Maybe google is just hiding it from us. I am sure that when I search for "groupware" on or around page 100, it's there. :(
Till