Alex Schuster posted on Wed, 06 Aug 2014 23:27:29 +0200 as excerpted: > I also dropped KMail. I had way too many different issues, and it once > deleted a lot of e-mails. I'm also using Claws now, but I miss KMail. > Claws does not multi-task so well, it's not responsible when it fetches > mails. I have several e-mail accounts, one with > 100 sub-folders, so > checking takes a while. Thunderbird does this better. And also KMail. > All this Akonadi stuff still sounds like a good idea. But not if it > breaks things so often. Four comments/suggestions on that: 1) My mail providers are all POP3, not IMAP, so I tend to forget about people with a bunch of server-side IMAP content to deal with. With POP3 claws' single-threaded-ness isn't too bad, but I guess it could be in multi-big-folders IMAP situations. 2) If you get a chance, I'd honestly like your opinion on trojita. It's IMAP-only so not something I can use myself ATM, but based on what I saw when I researched it, were I on IMAP that would have very likely been the first thing I'd have tried when I decided I had to leave kmail. You may not have time and/or may not want to try yet /another/ client, but should you find the idea interesting, I'd /love/ to see your thoughts on it after taking it for a spin, and then after say a month or so if the immediate fit is good enough to trial it that long. (IIRC you're on gentoo too, unless I'm getting you mixed up with someone else. If so, the fact that the trojita lead dev is a gentoo dev too might interest you. Of course that's part of why I'm so interested in it myself, and would /love/ to see what someone with kmail and claws background both thinks about it. I was actually quite tempted to setup dovecot or the like as a local IMAP server, just to try it out, and at this point, that's actually pretty high on my list should claws ever turn sour on me.) 3) I'm not sure if this will help with your claws interactivity issues or not, but I'll throw it out there. Here, I'm actually running a couple separate claws instances. In my case, it was because after I ended up on claws for mail and was thus familiar with its basics, when I decided to replace akregator and kill kdepim entirely, trying claws as my feeds-client as well was a a logical next-step, but I /did/ want to keep mail and feeds separate, and running a second claws instance was the way I managed it. I have them set to different themes so I can tell apart their tray icons, and I had to point $HOME and $TMPDIR at different locations for each instance using a wrapper script for one, but for my needs it has actually worked pretty well. Depending on how your mail accounts are arranged and the split of the traffic between them, if one has about the same traffic as all the others put together, then setting up two separate instances might be a reasonable solution for you too. That could also work well for separating say work mail and private mail, too, which would be similar to the setup I have here but for different reasons. OTOH, if nearly all the traffic is on one account anyway, that'll still be the big bottleneck and two claws instances won't help you much. 4) Going a bit more advanced, claws of course uses the mh mail-directory format, well known for its ease of scripting, and of course there are other mail clients including the text-based mutt that natively support mh. A more advanced setup could use mutt or something else to do the primary (periodic) pulldowns in the background and possibly scripted to pull accounts in parallel, leaving claws to handle the local GUI side, plus occasional on-demand pulls. I certainly appreciate that flexibility and the ability to script extensions as I want/need here, and actually have one rather minor extension I scripted myself setup. Tho I don't actually use the feature heavily, it's definitely nice to know that it's there if I need it. Of course before kmail went all akonadi, at least with maildir it had similar, if more limited, scriptability. I guess it's sort of still there with akonadi, but given the lack of reliability, it'd be just that much of a bigger house of cards. <shrug> -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.