[ale] evolution dropping email
Leam Hall
leamhall at gmail.com
Sat Dec 31 10:27:57 EST 2011
On 12/31/2011 08:31 AM, Mike Harrison wrote:
> On Fri, 30 Dec 2011, Leam Hall wrote:
>
>> Tim,
>>
>> My frustration comes from one big incident. Evolution started to close
>> up but didn't have enough disk space so instead of a smart bail I lost a
>> good bit of e-mail. I just pulled it from every machine I had and
>> haven't looked back.
>
> I'm using evolution for my work-related google hosted mail,
> which works... but I'd like to find a better client, especially
> one that deals with the normal business world Outlook users
> email insanity better.
>
> What did you change to?
>
> (I'm using Pine still for my personal stuff.. and as backup interface
> to work/gmail when all I can do is SSH out from a clients site..)
>
Mike,
I use Thunderbird for mostly non-technical reasons. I'll share the logic
on the off chance that someone else cares. If not, consider it a
negative example. :)
I used to use Mutt and procmail but kept getting so many mails that I
could not read that a more graphical client was needed. While my Linux
friends did text, the rest of the world likes pretty images and I got
tired of having to save the files and open them in something else. Hence
the original move to Evolution.
While I'm a Red Hat sort of guy I really dislike the cesspool that is
inter-RPM dependencies. This needs that, you have to have perl to
install PHP on a web server, etc. Nauseating, if you like efficiency.
Evolution was one such offender both in the giving and receiving of
dependencies.
After some time I realized that all of my hardware is old and well past
the MTBF point on most of the critical components. I also had to think
through what is really important to me. Staying current in the field is,
storing old dusty hardware (1) on the chance it might be used is not.
Since I use Firefox as a browser I chose Thunderbird as the mail client.
Distro portable and a large community behind it.
I feel strongly that there is more work for me in helping solve business
problems than in flipping bits for a living. So I use tools that
non-hackers can use and I'm fixing to push myself into the cloud so I
can talk to customers about it. I solve business problems for a living
and my background is playing with Linux at home and at work for almost
two decades.
So my criteria was an open source graphical client that non-Linux geeks
can use and wasn't a fringe product. Thunderbird fit that bill.
Make sense?
Leam
(1) We'll ignore the fact that my main personal machine is an IBM T-30
that struggles to keep up with the Fedora 14 it's running.
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