Showing posts with label mac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mac. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 May 2007

Not Happy Mac

My MacBook has managed to trash my preferences again - not too drastic maybe, except that also means its lost all my Mail settings (glad the mail itself is on imap) and all the calendar settings including the actual entries....

It looks like changing the video setup whilst it is suspended is a good way to break things - suspend then unplug the external video and open it up again without the external video, and it can hang. Suspend without external video, plug it in, then unsuspend and again it can hang - to the extent that I had to force a power off and restart it.... at which point when logging in again a bunch of things had gone.

Normally I log out when transferring from office to home or back, today I had quit all the applications, but not logged out, so it used that as an excuse to trash things.

Pulling back the main preferences files (in Library/Preferences) from my backups (taken this morning, but on a live system) seems to have got most things back, but its a pain I could do without. Hopefully I should only have lost a couple of calendar entries and a bit of time - could have been so much worse.

Backup on a Mac is also a pain - well it is if you have an encrypted home directory, which seems like a reasonable thing to do on a laptop. How do you get a quiescent filesystem to work with. Maybe Time Machine will fix this.

But this should not happen!!!

Tuesday, 27 March 2007

Handling Mail

I pretty much live by email. I've been using it for around 25 years now, and have had good access to internet email for close on 20 years. I've been on open development mailing lists for all of that time, and have at times been receiving many hundreds (if not thousands) of messages a day.

I obviously don't read all those messages - not in detail - and since I maintain a bunch of machines that send all sorts of general notification mail, much of it is glanced at (ie just look at sender and subject) and either ignored or deleted.

All this mail means I have strategies in place to cope with it - for at least 15 years all my incoming mail has been sorted by incoming filters and dropped into appropriate mailboxes. List mail is filed in a folder for the list it comes from, admin email is sorted into a few categories, expected commercial mail is also sorted etc. And that rarest of commodities, real personal mail, hits my inbox (or one of the 4 inboxes I currently use).

During my period of using Email I have used elm, NeXTMail, MH, exmh, evolution and finally Mail.app.

I have to admit that I am really conflicted with Apple's Mail. One the one hand it does a lot of stuff really well (searching for example), and there are some really neat extensions - for example
MailTags is great. But the foundations seem a little shakey.

Somewhere deep in its heart, Mail is a basic
POP client - it does IMAP, but even though it handles this to a higher standard than many mail clients, it still isn't really happy with the concept of lots of folders which other things can manipulate.

For example, the
rules mechanisms seem to handle mail that was delivered somewhere other than the Inbox poorly - sometimes they don't filter it, sometimes they do.

Obviously for me, since 99% of my mail goes nowhere near my Inbox, this is a problem. And one I need to work on further...