I will email them too.

On Aug 14, 2014 9:43 AM, "Thomas Bruederli" <thomas@roundcube.net> wrote:
On Thu, Aug 14, 2014 at 8:37 AM, Thomas Bruederli <thomas@roundcube.net> wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 13, 2014 at 4:47 PM, madalin <niladam@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> I had a look http://www.email-standards.org/ and i sent myself an email to
>> test it.
>>
>> Roundcube responded greatly, and the email actually DOES look like it's
>> supposed to be. I think roundcube SHOULD be on that list with FULL SUPPORT
>> added to it :)
>>
>> Maybe the coders could drop them an email or something ?
>
> I did that long time ago. Never got a response or witnessed any action
> on their side... finally gave up.

FWIW: this is the mail I wrote to them back in 2011 reporting that
Roundcube 0.7 passes the test. Maybe somebody else can take another
attempt?


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Thomas Bruederli <thomas@roundcube.net>
Date: Wed, Dec 14, 2011 at 4:40 PM
Subject: Roundcube Webmail passes the Acid Test
To: hello@email-standards.org


Hello

I'd like to inform you that with the recently released version 0.7
Roundcube webmail is able to properly render the acid test message. In
previous versions Roundcube suppressed the entire style block if it
contained an url() property for security reasons. After recent efforts we
improved the protection mechanism and now allow properly formatted url()
properties. See the attached screenshot of Roundcube displaying the acid
test message. If you'd like to convince yourself about it you can use our
demo installation at http://demo.roundcube.net. Since Roundcube is a
web-based mail client, rendering also depends on the browser used to access
it but I guess almost all current browsers are able to display all of the
CSS styles correctly.

We would very much appreciate your verification and if you'd list Roundcube
on your website. Since our webmailer becomes more and more popular we think
it'd be notable along with the other clients you already listed.

For future acid tests I also suggest to build more complex
multipart/alternative/related mime messages with inline images etc. in
order to test the mime parsing capabilities of email clients. Similar to
the mime torture tests which have been around for some time now.

Best regards,

--
Thomas Bruederli

Project leader Roundcube Webmail
http://roundcube.net
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