@ azhrei_fje
Umm Mail is integrated with everything like iCal, AddressBook etc ... what is it not integrated with?
Well, Mail doesn't seem to find dates that are just typed in as plain text into a message. I understand that it does now in Leopard, but I'm not there (yet).
I'd like more powerful filtering capabilities. Using KMail on Linux, I can tell it that when I reply to a message in a folder, that the saved copy of the reply should be kept in the same folder. Then I configure my mail client so that all incoming mail is put into the correct folders immediately, so what's left in my inbox is either spam or a message from someone that I don't recognize. Or a newsletter I subscribe to. Then I go through the folders one at a time and if I reply, I don't need to go to the Sent folder and move the copies where they need to be. I know that large populations of people don't use folders any more (they use Smart Folders or Mailbox Filters or whatever your email client calls them), but I have email going back a LONG ways and I like having physical folders for them.
I'd like to be able to run a shell script when a mail message arrives. I can run an AppleScript (I think?) but I'm a Unix guru and I prefer a command line shell. My goal is to automatically select some messages and forward copies to another machine in my office.
One the Mac Mail program sets a color on a message (via a filter) there doesn't seem to be any way to turn it off again later. In addition, messages can be "flagged", but that's the only marking that can be applied to them. With KMail I can define my own markings and apply them using filters. And I can run a filter (or filters) against any given set of messages at any time that I want in a manner much simpler than Mac Mail.
I travel a lot and I miss having multiple outbound mail connections defined so that I can choose one easily. For example, many hotels block outbound connections to port 25 (SMTP) so I have Mac Mail configured to send all email to my ISP via port 587 (Secure SMTP). But occasionally a hotel will block that port such that I have to use port 25. It's a pain to reconfigure each time -- with KMail I would just select one connection from a list and click "Use This One" and I'm done.
Mac Mail sometimes displays HTML attachments when I don't want it to and I can't seem to turn that off. If my brother sends me an HTML file as an attachment, Mac Mail displays it. And there's no way to "right-click and choose Save" to save the HTML. So I have to go to "View->Message->Raw Source" and then cut-n-paste the HTML into a file. Ugh!
When sending an email, I can't choose compression, encryption, etc. (Well, I can choose encryption but it's not easy.) With KMail there's a panel at the bottom of the message that lists each portion of the message (text and attachments) and I can click a checkbox to turn compression and encryption on/off for each individual portion of the message.
Whew! And that's just Mac Mail!
I also miss Konqueror (the Linux/KDE web browser and file manager) because I like using urls such as, "print:/" to see the print manager and "man:ls" to see the graphical man page for "ls". There's also a "fish://host/path" url for making a connection via SSH to another host and then using the GUI's drag-n-drop to copy files! Very cool!
I miss being able to right-click on a bookmark entry in a browser to edit the properties of that bookmark entry. On Mac browsers it takes about 7-8 clicks to do the same thing!
I miss having a current Java implementation. Especially one that isn't hobbled by the Mac right-click/Ctrl-click debacle. Although Leopard has Java 6 in 64-bit mode so I shouldn't complain too much about this. But why hasn't Apple released an update for Tiger? (Because they don't care about existing Tiger users. This is what makes them just as bad as Microsoft. Linux developers actually
care about users because in many cases they are one-and-the-same!)
Sorry. We now return you to your regularly scheduled program.
