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Topic: Mutt (email client)


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In the News (Mon 21 Dec 09)

  
  php-deluxe.net - description Mutt email client
Mutt is a command line interface email client for Unix-like systems.
Mutt is fully controlled with the keyboard, and has support for mail threading, meaning one can easily move around long discussions such as in electronic mailing list.
The authors of mutt claim that while all email clients are flawed, mutt has fewer flaws than any of the competition.
www.php-deluxe.net /encyclopedia,index.page,Mutt-email-client.htm   (299 words)

  
 Mutt (e-mail client) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mutt is a pure Mail User Agent (MUA) and cannot send e-mail in isolation.
Mutt is fully controlled with the keyboard, and has support for mail threading, meaning one can easily move around long discussions such as in mailing lists.
The authors of mutt claim that while all e-mail clients are flawed, mutt has fewer flaws than any of the competition.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Mutt_(email_client)   (296 words)

  
 The Mutt E-Mail Client: Getting Started
Mutt has a builtin line editor which is used as the primary way to input textual data such as email addresses or filenames.
Mutt uses these attributes for handling text/enriched messages, and they can also be used by an external autoview script for highlighting purposes.
The $wait_key can be used to control whether Mutt will wait for a key to be pressed when the command returns (presumably to let the user read the output of the command), based on the return status of the named command.
www.sfu.ca /acs/email/mutt/manual/manual-2.html   (2887 words)

  
 The Mutt E-Mail Client   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mutt 1.5.11 was released on September 15, 2005.
Users of "unstable" mutt versions after 1.3.28 (including 1.5.*) do not need to upgrade, as this problem had been fixed in the unstable branch in February 2002; unfortunately, the fix was not backported before 1.4 was released.
Mutt was originally written by Michael Elkins but is now developed and maintained by the members of the Mutt development mailing list.
www.mutt.org   (463 words)

  
 My first mutt
Mutt is a powerful, configurable and modern mail user agent for Unix-like systems such as GNU/linux, BSD Unix, Sun Solaris or Apple OS-X (there is also a win32 mutt port available either standalone or as part of the Cygwin package).
Mutt is great for finding your way among large amounts of mail in a folder, regular expressions are the basic tools.
Mutt has a simple and powerful method for storing and retrieving names and addresses, plus other address systems can be accessed.
mutt.blackfish.org.uk   (795 words)

  
 Reading Mail on the Server in a Telnet Session
Note that the setting for "from" is the email address which is shown in the From field of the email header.
You will be prompted for the email address of the recipient and the subject of the message, after which Mutt will shell out to your preferred editor interface.
Mutt is an extremely powerful and versatile mail client, and this tutorial is only a very brief introduction to using it.
www.aota.net /Email_Extras/mutt.php4   (1366 words)

  
 Real Programmers: Jump Start: Mutt -- by hackers, for hackers
Mutt is based on elm (and written by the same author) so will feel familiar to people who've used elm.
Mutt has the ability to display messages by related discussion ("threads") rather than the more commonly seen (and jumbled) date sent.
Mutt's documentation doesn't make a big deal of "limit" nor introduces it until well into the manual but it's one of mutt's real gems and is well worth learning early.
realprogrammers.com /jump_start/mutt   (857 words)

  
 mutt and more
It is not meant to make mutt into a newsreader, but allow you to treat newsgroups the same as your mailboxes.
This causes mutt to add a Content-MD5: header to each outgoing message (or section of a multipart message) which is the BASE64 encoding of the MD5 Digest of the message body.
This patch causes mutt to count the number of messages and new messages in a folder when you are using the mutt Folder Mode (dirlist.c).
www.fiction.net /blong/programs/mutt   (729 words)

  
 Gary Johnson's Mutt Page
Since mutt was designed to work with properly designed and configured MUAs, it does not use filename extensions to further identify the content of application/octet-stream attachments.
The trouble with this is that as soon as mutt resumes executing, it first overwrites the temporary file it passed to the viewer with NULs, then unlinks (deletes) the file.
Mutt recognizes the Expires: header and has an ~E pattern which matches messages that have expired, that is, whose Expires: dates and times are earlier than the current date and time.
www.spocom.com /users/gjohnson/mutt   (3591 words)

  
 The Mutt E-Mail Client: Mutt's MIME Support
This causes Mutt to invoke a pager (either the internal pager or the external pager defined by the pager variable) on the output of the view command.
Mutt uses this flag when viewing attachments with autoview, in order to decide whether it should honor the setting of the $wait_key variable or not.
Mutt supports this from the compose menu, and also uses it to compose new attachments.
www.sendmail.org /~ca/email/mutt/manual-5.html   (2347 words)

  
 Mutt and IMAP
Mutt supports a tunneling driver which allows you to connect using, eg, an SSH pipe which invokes your IMAP server directly on the remote machine.
Mutt supports several ways to authenticate to your IMAP server, including plain-old login, CRAM-MD5 (in which the server issues a one-time challeng string which you hash with your password and then send back.
in which case mutt will only try gssapi, and if that fails or is unavailable (either because the server doesn't support it or you have no ticket-granting ticket), mutt will not log you in.
mutt.sourceforge.net /imap   (1170 words)

  
 The Mutt E-Mail Client: Configuration
When Mutt is first invoked, it will attempt to read the ``system'' configuration file (defaults set by your local system administrator), unless the ``-n'' command line option is specified.
Mutt allows you to create ``aliases'' which map a short string to a full address.
This file is not special either, in the sense that Mutt will happily append aliases to any file, but in order for the new aliases to take effect you need to explicitly source this file too.
www.sendmail.org /~ca/email/mutt/manual-3.html   (3015 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mutt is highly configurable, and is well suited to the mail power user with advanced features like key bindings, keyboard macros, mail threading, regular expression searches and a powerful pattern matching language for selecting groups of messages.
Example: send-hook mutt "set mime_forward signature=''" Another typical use for this command is to change the values of the $attribution, $signature and $locale variables in order to change the language of the attributions and signatures based upon the recipients.
Mutt should correctly notice which separator is being used by the server and convert paths accordingly.
dev.mutt.org /doc/manual.txt   (16719 words)

  
 mutt   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mutt is sometimes used informally to refer to mixed breeding of other species as well.
Mutt (email client) is a terminal-based email client for Unix systems.
Mutt was a character in the Mutt and Jeff comic strip.
www.culturecentric.com /Unix-M/mutt.php   (115 words)

  
 [No title]
Installing Mutt w/ Fetchmail and Procmail on Ubuntu Linux Hakim Singhji (hzs202@nyu.edu) v0.1, 18 August 2005 This HOWTO is published free of charge for the use and benefit of Linux users.
Mutt does not use a GUI, it is a text based interface which allows for modification and configurations that are applied by typing keywords and commands into a run control (RC) file.
Mutt was originally written by Michael Elkins in 1995, it was released under the GNU General Public License.
homepages.nyu.edu /~hzs202/docs/mutt-install   (1198 words)

  
 EmailClients - Debian Wiki
Thunderbird is a free, open-source and cross-platform mail client for most operating systems based on the Mozilla codebase.
It is a robust and easy to use client, similar to Outlook Express, but with some major advantages such as junk mail classification.
Mutt is a feature rich text based email client that is highly configurable via the single config file ~/.mutt/muttrc.
wiki.debian.org /EmailClients   (178 words)

  
 [No title]
Mutt runs in a terminal window (console/xterm/rxvt/whatever), so it may turn off some people who like nice shiny graphical interfaces.
Another strength of mutt is that you can specify the editor it uses (default is vi) by setting the EDITOR environment variable.
Mutt does have a few weaknesses, though -- for example, it can be hard to get used to the internal pager system for reading long email, and closing a mailbox without reading all the new messages will leave those messages no longer marked as "new".
www.linuxchix.org /content/recommends/software/mutt.html   (292 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mutt sucks, but it sucks a little less than other mail clients.
When starting mutt with "mutt", your new inbox (of your student mail account) is displayed.
When you configured mutt with IMAP folders, all folders in your student mail account are displayed.
www.crypto.ethz.ch /~hirt/mutt.html   (573 words)

  
 Athena UNIX Email Client Transition Plan
Alternatives that involved writing an email client from scratch, adding IMAP to an existing command line client, integrating an obscure email client, or taking over support of a moribund email client were rejected.
initial review favored mutt as the recommended choice, as the number of stakeholders consulted widened, the overwhelming consensus was, "mutt is fine for programmers, but a lot more people are familiar with pine.
Athena's default mail client is now the GUI Client, which will make it easier to send attachments and which will store your saved mail on your Post Office server where it can be accessed from Mac and PC clients as well as from Athena.
web.mit.edu /teamhtml/Athena/plans/email-transition.html   (955 words)

  
 List of web sites about Unix: Mutt
Mutt-i, GnuPG and PGP Howto - This document briefly explains how to configure Mutt-i, PGP and GnuPG in its diferents versions (2.6.x, 5.x and GnuPG).
mutt_ldap_query: Query LDAP server for Mutt mail-reader - mutt_ldap_query is a perl script that performs ldap queries using either ldapsearch command or the perl-ldap module and it outputs the required formatted data for feeding mutt when using its "External Address Query" feature.
The idea was to present mutt's capabilities and strengths, and go through the different configuration tasks necessary to use mutt effectively.
www.kub.it /dir/5567   (776 words)

  
 MUTT(tm) Winsock based MUD CLIENT
If you want a free MUD client - that supports a scripting language, triggers, hotkeys and cursor key navigation - without the overhead of a fancy GUI, or the drawbacks of a toolbar (forcing you to repeatedly switch between keyboard and mouse), Lite is the one you'll want.
If you just have to have ANSI color support and/or a fancy UI, Live is a MUD client that provides dialogs for easy configuration, a built-in script editor and a number of other new features.
If you want a 32bit MUD client, with DLL support for 3rd party addons, Elite is the way to go.
www.graphcomp.com /mutt   (284 words)

  
 Mutt on Windows (win32)
The Cygwin port of Mutt is by far more complete than this one, and Cygwin comes with many of the Unix tools Mutt is intended to run in co-operation with.
Since the first reason to compile Mutt as a native Windows version was to not depend on extra dll:s (like cygwin.dll) there is also a a minimal version that only requires Microsoft dll:s.
If you already run Mutt on Unix you should be able to reuse most of your muttrc except for the $sendmail variable.
www.geocities.com /win32mutt/win32.html   (802 words)

  
 Mutt Mail Client Tutorial   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Mutt is a mail client for the UNIX environment.
Mutt will also spellcheck your message if you type 'i'.
The Mutt Homepage - Contains the mutt manual and lots of useful information for non-beginners.
ugweb.cs.ualberta.ca /howtos/mutt.html   (480 words)

  
 Open Directory - Computers: Software: Internet: Clients: Mail: Unix: Mutt   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Gary Johnson's Mutt Page - A site that offers a wide number of examples for managing various types of MIME attachments with Mutt.
Mutt and IMAP - These notes describe IMAP facilities present in mutt 1.4 and later: Connecting to your IMAP server, Using an IMAP server instead of local mail.
The Woodnotes Guide to the Mutt Email Client - Document, in html and pdf, that presents mutt's capabilities and strengths, and go through the more important configuration tasks, necessary to use mutt effectively.
dmoz.org /Computers/Software/Internet/Clients/Mail/Unix/Mutt   (595 words)

  
 Mutt - SlackWiki
Mutt is a text-based mail client renowned for its powerful features and the fact that it is almost totally customizable.
This article will cover the installation and configuration of mutt in order to use it as your daily email client.
Just like mutt, getmail is in the 'n' series, and should already be installed if you chose to do a full install.
slackwiki.org /Mutt   (738 words)

  
 mutt next generation
Actually, mutt-ng had many more features that weren't integrated in mutt until the 1.5.7 release, but with this release, the maintainer of mutt quickly decided after months of inactivity to integrate a number of interesting patches, so I will not count those patches to be mutt-ng-specific (anymore).
When migrating from either mutt or an older version of mutt-ng to a newer one, incompatible changes may have been made although we try to avoid that as far as possible.
For most users, it's enough to take the old mutt configuration and use it with mutt-ng as both projects still are similar.
mutt-ng.berlios.de   (575 words)

  
 Virtual Folders in mutt - O'Reilly Sysadmin   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
While mutt, my preferred email client, is great at searching for a term within a folder, it isn’t as easy to search all of your email folders at once.
I was first inspired by this post that described using mairix to create a virtual folder in mutt.
I realized that when I ran this search in mutt, what would be nice is for mutt to automatically change to this new folder while it was being populated with email.
www.oreillynet.com /sysadmin/blog/2005/01/virtual_folders_in_mutt.html   (702 words)

  
 (Sender) Profiles with Mutt
Even though this document focuses on sender profiles, profiles in general are not restricted to sending email or even the Mutt email client.
In fact, a profile with Mutt is only a way to think of groups of parameters in muttrc, not a builtin feature or mechanism.
Mutt has a feature that it remembers the passphrase for the PGP signing key for a certain period of time (pgp_timeout) after it has been used once.
www.acoustics.hut.fi /~mara/mutt/profiles.html   (1100 words)

  
 Mutt repeated new mail reporting problems   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-07)
Then when you read the folder, the accessed time of the file containing the mail should become more recent than the modified time, so no new mail will be reported again until the next time mail is delivered.
Mutt will tell you again and again that you have new mail.
I get mutt to do this automatically for me. Here is how I do this, but I’m sure there must be a better way.
www.gatsby.ucl.ac.uk /~iam23/compnotes/noatime_mutt.html   (313 words)

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