![]() So – again – a review ofįreeway and the new OS will be much welcomed by many, I’m sure. I can’t help but wonder what performance tradeoffs Quicklook,ĭon’t get me wrong – I would love these new features… provided they Already I am hearing that “large” Stacks are problematic, and Precious drive space for photographers who have large numbers of IPhoto (and its big brother Aperature) can hog enormous amounts of Useless if you have a thousand or more typefaces to work with… When its database becameĬorrupt, it was super easy to fix – and wait another day for it toĪpple’s innovations are cool but not always practical – Fontbook is For example, Spotlight was a nice addition – after theĭay it took to catalog my drive contents. Ideology and reflect very little in terms of everyday or practicalĮxperience. ![]() Some benchmarks are like political polls – they are skewed by While I do not wish to argue with the likes of Mr. I agree, a review of Freeway under the new OS would be most useful! To get the full listing you have to click again It shows a 50 icon max grid listing which is maybe half of myĪpplications folder. What it does now is either the new “fan” effect which I detest, or Shocked that Apple released something that has such obvious visual It canīe surprisingly difficult to read quickly and easily! Try dropping down a menu over the top of a textĭocument, something with lines of black text on a white page. On Macs with reasonably powerful graphics the menusĪre translucent. It seems it mayīe very dependent upon the graphics card you have. Interestingly, I don’t see the transparent menu bar. I'm not sure where this leaves me, but at least I know a little more about what's happening.Sometime around 30/10/07 (at 12:00 -0400) chuckamuck said: If it's not, they GoDaddy's mishandling the email during a copy. If Mail is solely responsible for tracking coloring, then somehow Mail is miss-processing my GoDaddy IMAP. Is it possible that GoDaddy's IMAP implementation is causing Mail to drop the coloring? Maybe a unique key that identifies the message to Mail is changing during the copy? I don't know much about the specs of the IMAP protocol. If that's the case, then I don't see how copying a colored message from within GoDaddy is any different that with Gmail. I thought the coloring is done by and tracked by Mail. However - and this is strange - if I copy a colored message from one GoDaddy IMAP folder to another GoDaddy folder, the coloring is dropped! If I copy a colored message from one Gmail IMAP folder to another Gmail folder, the coloring is kept. If I copy a colored message from either IMAP account to a local folder, the coloring is kept. If I manually copy a colored message between the 2 IMAP accounts, the coloring is retained. I did some further testing with 2 IMAP accounts I have - GoDaddy (main) and Gmail. I do have the option checked to keep local copies for offline viewing. It's good (I think) to know that Mail works the way I think it should with your accounts, although it's not working for me. Because of this, I've had to keep a local Spam folder to retain SpamSieve's coloring.ĭoes anyone else that uses IMAP notice this problem? I don't think it has anything to do with my IMAP host (GoDaddy), but who knows? It's hard to believe that Mail should work this way, but again, who knows? This makes using SpamSieve with an IMAP Spam folder difficult to use if you need to know the "spamminess" of messages. However, if I move the colored IMAP message to another IMAP folder, the coloring disappears. ![]() If I then move this message back to a local mailbox, the coloring is again retained. If for instance, I have a colored message in a local mailbox and I move it to an IMAP folder, the moved message retains its coloring. However, through numerous testing of this configuration with SpamSieve, it became evident that Mail does not retain the message coloring when emails are moved between IMAP folders. My inbox is IMAP, and for a while, I experimented with keeping a Spam folder on my IMAP server (for iPhone access). I use SpamSieve to color my spam so that I can easily identify messages that are classified as "uncertain", I.e. I've noticed this problem after upgrading to Snow Leopard/Mail 4.2.
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