5 month ago
Andy Baio : Mail Trends, IMAP-based email analysis and visualization - works great with Gmail; for a sample dataset, Mihai used the Enron email archive [via]
joshua : mail-trends - analyze and visualize your email as extracted from an IMAP server
Rod Begbie : mail-trends - Analyzes your email corpus and displays nice graphs. Currently only works with GMail, but support for all IMAP servers is planned. [via] #
philgyford : Mail-trends - Google Code - "Mail Trends lets you analyze and visualize your email (as extracted from an IMAP server)" Haven't tried it, but it looks purty. (via Haddock)
Jeremy Zawodny : mail-trends - mail-trends: "Mail Trends lets you analyze and visualize your email (as extracted from an IMAP server)."
# copy
5 month ago
philgyford : Offline folders - MozillaZine Knowledge Base - The hidden (in that you have to create it) Thunderbird setting to have it store copies of IMAP messages locally.
# copy
10 month ago
tjogin : configure apple mail with gmail imap
# copy
10 month ago
philgyford : The RoundCube Webmail Project - Nice looking, free, open source web-based IMAP email client.
# copy
17 month ago
Rod Begbie : Free Mobile Push Email - Consilient Push - IMAP or POP mail pushed to your cellphone for free. Works with S60 phones. [via] #
# copy19 month ago
nelson : Debian, dovecot, SSL - Sure is a lot easier than trying to understand how to generate certificates by hand
# copy
36 month ago
Nelson Minar : RoundCube Webmail - Intereting looking free webmail system
Jeremy Zawodny : RoundCube Webmail Project - RoundCube Webmail Project: RoundCube Webmail is a browser-based multilingual IMAP client with an application-like user interface. It provides full functionality you expect from an e-mail client, including MIME support, address book, folder manipulation an
Rod Begbie : RoundCube Webmail Project - Attractive, and fairly lightweight, self-hostable webmail client. Works with any IMAP server. [via] #
# copy
38 month ago
deusx : controller code ...: IMAP + Bloglines - "What I want is something like IMAP for Bloglines." This is where FeedReactor was heading. Maybe I'll get back to it someday.
# copy