An Email Client that I like

An Email Client that I like

am 17.04.2006 08:22:03 von ab5cvjl

Like many people, I am still still looking for an email client that
doesn't have something major wrong with it.

I found one that doesn't seem to be that well known but has some
features that do what I want to do. It's Gemini at www.intellegit.com.

You can keep multiple message windows open at once. I often read a
message only to discover that completing it may take a while and I
want to do some others first. I can leave the first one open and read
others and find it where I left when I can get to it.

The latest beta allows you to set the color of read and unread
messages. I have long wanted to set my email client like my browser
and use red and green for read and unread messages.

You can put each mail from each server in its own inbox, effectively.
I had to give up on Opera M2, which I liked, because I had to have that
feature.

You can edit the subject lines of emails. That never worked for me in
Thunderbird.

You can also set the font of message lists. Setting that to a
condensed font makes it possible to read some all of many subject lines
that otherwise are too wide to fit.

It comes with a good manual.

This program merits attention.

Re: An Email Client that I like

am 17.04.2006 09:15:17 von ab5cvjl

I forgot to add that the program lets you set your own shortcut keys.

Re: An Email Client that I like

am 17.04.2006 09:30:20 von Alan Mackenzie

ab5cvjl@yahoo.com wrote on 16 Apr 2006 23:22:03 -0700:
> Like many people, I am still still looking for an email client that
> doesn't have something major wrong with it.

> I found one that doesn't seem to be that well known but has some
> features that do what I want to do. It's .

[ .... ]

> This program merits attention.

I think the bit you forgot to put in was that you are in no way connected
with the writers of this software. The other thing you forgot was your
name!

Happy Easter to all who observe it!

--
Alan Mackenzie (Munich, Germany)
Email: aacm@muuc.dee; to decode, wherever there is a repeated letter
(like "aa"), remove half of them (leaving, say, "a").