In that review, I stated my judgment that Mailsmith’s filtering options are more powerful, more flexible, and more varied than those of any other Mac OS email client. This article is a followup to "Mailsmith 1.5: Lean, Mean Email Machine," my review of Mailsmith in TidBITS-638. Indeed, after allowing you to receive mail and send mail, helping you organize your mail is the single most useful thing an email client can do, and filtering is the number one tool for the job. The best way to prevent this nightmare (and the best way to deal with the mess if it has already developed) is to define and use email filters. If you simply let messages pile up in your incoming and outgoing mailboxes, sooner or later you’ll have an organizational nightmare on your hands. We’ve never met, but I know something about you: you’re getting more email this year than you did last year, possibly a lot more. Mailsmith and Distributed Filtering, Part 1 1647: Focus-caused notification issues, site-specific browser examples, virtualizing Windows on M-series Macs.#1648: iPhone passcode thefts, Center Cam improves webcam eye contact, APFS Uncertainty Principle.#1649: More LastPass breach details and 1Password switch, macOS screen saver problem, tvOS 16.3.3 fixes Siri Remote bug.#1650: Cloud storage changes for Box, Dropbox, Google Drive, and OneDrive quirky printing problem.#1651: Dealing with leading zeroes in spreadsheet data, removing ad tracking from ckbk.
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