Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Email”
Best Jeryk? Weird typo
[caption id=“attachment_6182” align=“aligncenter” width=“500”] Best Selling Jeryk - weird Amazon Typo[/caption]
Especially because I would expect this to just be automated. Someone at Amazon decides to put jerky on sale, it should auto-generate the email title. It should NOT be written by a human that could end up with a weird typo like this!
Testing Email Clients
Ever since late Fedora 12 or, for sure, Fedora 13, Evolution has been annoying me. I don’t know if it’s linked or coincidental, but it appears to have started getting buggy after I noticed it was using couchdb, a database that a lot of database people in the Linux world are getting all excited about. Evolution is the Linux equivalent to Microsoft Office Outlook. I switched to it a few years ago so that I could have tasks, email, and calenders in one spot. In theory, it’s perfect - it syncs with Hotmail, Gmail, and Google Calendar. I have all my todo items in there out to April of next year. It supports GPG signing and encryption via integration with Gnome’s Seahorse keyring. In practice, it has started taking forever to start a new email or enter a new task. I click the button and then have to wait for a long time until the dialog pops up; if it pops up. A lot of the time doing this causes the program to crash. I’ve filed a bug via the auto-bug-filing program in Fedora. There’s also a bug that doesn’t bother me as much where it keeps asking me to supply the password for my Hotmail account and not accepting it until the next time I restart the program. So I decided that I’d wait and see if things improved with Gnome 2.32, included in Fedora 14.
Let the flow of encrypted bits henceforth flow!
I have finally uploaded my public encryption key to the main pgp server that is the default on KGPG, the encryption program I use on my Linux computer. I also set up my Thunderbird email program to digitially sign all of the messages I send with my public key so that anyone who gets an email from my Gmail account will now have the assurance that I sent them the email and not someone spoofing me. In fact, if they have the ability to check GPG keys on their computer, they will be able to check the key against the server and make sure that the email has not been changed since I wrote it.