TidBITS#547/11-Sep-00
=====================

  Use Eudora? Thinking about using Eudora? A detailed look at the
  unusual features in the just-released Eudora 5.0 anchors this
  week's issue, and Kirk McElhearn returns to BookBITS with a review
  of Newton's Telecom Dictionary. New releases include BBEdit 6.0,
  Default Folder 3.0.7, and VSE Link Tester 3.1, and we report on
  the surprising results of last week's poll on 68K Macintosh usage
  and present a vocabulary quiz for this week's brain tester.

Topics:
    MailBITS/11-Sep-00
    BookBITS: Telling the Bits from the Bytes
    Eudora 5.0 Reads Your Mind

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-547.html>
<ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/issues/2000/TidBITS#547_11-Sep-00.etx>

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MailBITS/11-Sep-00
------------------

**BBEdit 6.0 Improves Powerful Text Editing** -- Bare Bones
  Software today released BBEdit 6.0, the company's flagship text
  editor and HTML authoring tool. The new version supports editing
  of multi-byte text and recognizes Web language specifications for
  HTML 4.01, XHTML 1.0, and WML 1.1 for use with its markup tools.
  HTML authors can now access improved Web-safe color palettes and
  insert and edit commands using contextual menus. BBEdit's
  sophisticated search and replace feature incorporates improvements
  for working with multiple files, including filtering for several
  criteria. BBEdit 6.0 also improves its OSA scripting support,
  introduces a plug-in architecture for developers looking to
  customize syntax highlighting and functions, and adds other
  refinements such as Apple Keychain support and multiple
  clipboards. Upgrades are available in several forms: those who
  bought BBEdit 5.x after 01-Jun-00 can upgrade for free; owners of
  BBEdit 2.5 and later can get it for $39 directly from Bare Bones
  Software; and a cross-upgrade price of $79 applies to owners of
  competing and complementary products (see the Bare Bones Web site
  for a list). The full retail price is $119. A 5 MB demo is also
  available. [JLC]

<http://www.barebones.com/products/bbedit.html>
<http://store.barebones.com/cross_upgrade.html>


**Default Folder 3.0.7 Squashes Bugs** -- St. Clair Software has
  released Default Folder 3.0.7, an update to the company's
  shareware utility for improving file access through Open and
  Save dialog boxes. (See "Tools We Use: Default Folder" in
  TidBITS-475_.) The update fixes a few potentially crashing bugs
  (including one when Internet Explorer 5 was running), no longer
  includes invisible folders in its Recent Folder list, and improves
  handling of its optional pop-up menu for accessing folders from
  the Finder. The 685K update is free for owners of Default Folder
  3.x and those who purchased version 2.x after 31-Jan-98.
  Otherwise, the program can be updated for $15 or registered
  in full for $25. [JLC]

<http://www.stclairsoft.com/DefaultFolder/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05341>


**VSE Link Tester 3.1 and Wet Noodles** -- In last week's issue,
  we mentioned VSE Link Tester 3.0, an upgrade to the utility for
  verifying Web site links (see "Tools We Use: Link Tester" in
  TidBITS-537_ for an overview of the program). Unfortunately, we
  mis-identified it as "VSE Link _Checker,_" an ironic gaffe
  considering our Managing Editor's failure to do his own checking.
  Rest assured, Jeff has been cooking up a large pot of wet noodles
  for self-flagellation due to the mistake. In the meantime, VSE has
  released VSE Link Tester 3.1, an update that can pose as 24 user
  agents for dealing with browser-specific versions of Web pages.
  The update (a 1.7 MB download) also fixes a handful of bugs and
  display glitches. [JLC]

<http://www.vse-online.com/link-tester/>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06098>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06010>


**Poll Results: 68K or Bust?!** Plenty of people still use older
  Macs built using the 68000 processor line, ranging from the once-
  mighty Quadra and IIfx down to the SE/30, Mac Plus, and even the
  original 128K Mac. They make great low-volume servers, or
  secondary machines for word processing or email. But these days,
  most software requires a PowerPC-based Mac. So we asked, "If you
  still regularly use a 68K Macintosh, do you attempt to keep its
  software up-to-date?" The results were surprisingly balanced. Of
  the almost 1,100 responses, 26 percent don't use 68K Macs, while
  24 percent of 68K users don't update the software at all, keeping
  their machines frozen in time. Of the remaining respondents, 26
  percent update only a few key 68K programs, while the other 25
  percent keep their software as up-to-date as possible. For more
  information on working with outdated software, see Matt Neuburg's
  article "Long Day's Journey into Night of the Living Dead
  Software" in TidBITS-494_. [JLC]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbpoll=56>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05519>


**Quiz Preview: Less is Moire** -- As an evaluation of your
  knowledge of computer terms before you run out to buy a copy of
  Newton's Telecom Dictionary, reviewed by Kirk McElhearn below,
  this week's quiz is a "which one of these terms isn't like the
  others" test made famous by the children's television program
  Sesame Street. We've come up with four terms, three of which are
  related, and it's up to you to identify which of them doesn't
  match. [ACE]

<http://www.tidbits.com/>


BookBITS: Telling the Bits from the Bytes
-----------------------------------------
  by Kirk McElhearn <kirk@mcelhearn.com>

  The speed of technology engenders not only growth in computer
  performance, but also in the number of words we use to talk about
  it. Computer terminology may not approach the doubling in chip
  performance that occurs every 18 months according to Moore's Law,
  but it can feel like that at times. Recent years have seen such
  new terms as streaming video, DSL, XML, portal, WAP, FireWire, and
  USB. Many TidBITS readers may know these words and their meanings,
  but what about terms like beepilepsy, stovepiping, or IEEE 1394?
  If you need to know what these terms mean, you could find out by
  doing a Web search, but if you want them all in one place, an
  up-to-date dictionary is essential. Most users may get by with
  knowing the basic words that are unavoidable, like hard disk, RAM,
  and CD-ROM, but for those who work in the computer business and
  care about using language correctly, a good dictionary of
  technical terms is essential.

  Newton's Telecom Dictionary, by Harry Newton (Telecom Books,
  $32.95) is the mother of all computer dictionaries. This
  perpetually soon-to-be-obsolete book tracks all the latest terms
  in computing, networking, and telecommunications. Don't let the
  title throw you off - it may have initially been about
  telecommunications, but over the years, the book has morphed into
  a computer dictionary as well. Now in its 16th edition, with over
  1,000 pages, you would be hard pressed to find a computer term
  that it doesn't define... at least for a few months.

<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=1578200539/tidbitselectro00A/>

  Avoiding obsolescence is the main problem computer dictionaries
  face. As technology moves ever onward, it is hard for the authors
  of a dictionary to keep up. Harry Newton updates the book every
  six months (there is a new numbered edition each year and an
  interim update every six months, under the same edition number),
  and he claims to add 100 new terms per week. So, you can be sure
  that whenever you buy it, it will be more or less up to date,
  until the next edition.

  Despite the title, Newton's Telecom Dictionary is more than just a
  dictionary. Many of its definitions are sufficiently detailed -
  some as long as four pages - to justify calling it an
  encyclopedia. They're well-written, and even exhibit a sense of
  humor at times. Take, for example, the definition for leg iron:
  "1. [...] What [telephone] personnel wear to climb wooden poles.
  2. Worn by prisoners to prevent them running away. Many customers
  want their telephone technicians to wear them until their system
  is up-and-running 100%." Harry Newton clearly aimed this book at a
  non-technical audience, which makes it useful for students of
  computing, as well as for executives who need to understand what
  their engineers are talking about.

  The book also contains thousands of abbreviations and acronyms
  from A to ZZF, covering the most common abbreviations used in
  computing. Harry Newton, however, doesn't try to provide an
  exhaustive list of abbreviations, given the vast number that
  aren't in common use.

  Although Newton's Telecom Dictionary is an invaluable reference
  tool for anyone working with computers and language, it could be
  better. The paper version works well for browsing, but I'd find a
  CD-ROM or online version useful for quickly looking up definitions
  and searching for words within definitions. As an example of how
  helpful this is, visit Denis Howe's less-extensive FOLDOC, the
  Free On-line Dictionary of Computing, which can also transfer
  searches to the Google search engine and the OneLook meta-
  dictionary search site. Another useful source for looking up
  abbreviation expansions online is the long-standing WorldWideWeb
  Acronym and Abbreviation Server.

<http://www.foldoc.org/>
<http://www.ucc.ie/acronyms/>

  I'd also like to see some sort of an upgrade path for current
  users. The economics of the publishing world (and of shipping
  1,000-page books) probably ensure there's no way the publisher
  could provide physical upgrades. But what about serving existing
  readers online? I probably won't buy a new copy every year, but
  I'd be happier if I could consult a password-protected Web site
  for updates.

  Quibbles aside, Newton's Telecom Dictionary remains the essential
  reference for those of us who not only need to use the right terms
  when writing about technology, but also need to know precisely
  what they mean. With this book weighing down your bookshelf, you
  can be sure of finding and understanding the words behind the bits
  and bytes.

  [Kirk McElhearn is a freelance translator and technical writer
  living in a village in the French Alps.]


Eudora 5.0 Reads Your Mind
--------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  With today's release of Eudora 5.0, Qualcomm has at once shored up
  some weak spots in their popular email program and raised the bar
  with innovative new features. Foremost among the new features are
  Eudora Sharing Protocol (ESP), a plug-in that enables Eudora users
  to maintain the contents of shared folders automatically via
  email, and MoodWatch, a new technology that gives some indication
  of the "spiciness" of a message. But let's start with the "it's
  about time" features.

<http://www.eudora.com/>


**Basic I/O Functions** -- Many have complained about Eudora's
  inability to import messages from the proprietary database formats
  of other common email programs. Eudora 5.0 finally adds the
  capability to import mail from Claris Emailer 2.0 and Outlook
  Express 5.0, and although the feature won't interest existing
  Eudora users much, it should make converting to Eudora easier.
  Unlike most other importers, Eudora doesn't rely on a slow Apple
  event-based approach, and in my testing, imports of a few hundred
  messages moved along quickly.

  Those who have mail that was originally received by Claris Emailer
  1.x may experience some problems though, since older messages that
  displayed fine in Emailer 2.0 don't always import properly into
  Eudora. Running the messages through Outlook Express didn't seem
  to help either, though the results were different. Messages
  created in Emailer 2.0 or Outlook Express 5.0 posed fewer
  problems, although it's still a good idea to rebuild your email
  database before attempting an import (launch those programs with
  the Option key held down; in Emailer, perform an Advanced
  Rebuild). And of course, if all else fails, you can fall back on
  the AppleScript scripts that have worked in the past (for details,
  see "Switching from Emailer to Eudora in Leaps and Bounds" in
  TidBITS-528_). Qualcomm has been made aware of the problem and is
  aiming for a fix in 5.0.1.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05908>


**Little Black Book** -- Qualcomm is slowly updating various large
  sections of Eudora, such as Eudora Pro 4.2's radically improved
  Search functionality that we discussed in "Eudora Pro 4.2
  Continues to Deliver" in TidBITS-488_. In 5.0, the Address Book
  receives some attention, though the results are nowhere near as
  compelling as 4.2's new Search. Essentially, the Address Book
  gains an interface similar to the Mailboxes window with small
  icons for address books, individuals, and groups, and it also now
  stores more information, thanks to the addition of Home, Work,
  Other, and Notes tabs.

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05469>

  Although there's nothing particularly wrong with the new Address
  Book, there's nothing particularly interesting about it either.
  It's the old Address Book with additional fields. When asked,
  Steve Dorner (Eudora's primary author) said that the Eudora 5.0
  Address Book was mostly laying the foundation for future features,
  such as Palm synchronization and integration of contacts with
  email messages. Clearly, Qualcomm is trying to match Outlook
  Express 5.0 on a feature checklist basis, and an improved Address
  Book was necessary for that goal.

  For people with any kind of serious needs from their contact
  managers, Eudora 5.0's Address Book is just a tease, much like the
  same feature in Outlook Express. I don't even _want_ to see
  Eudora's Address Book replace my copy of Now Contact, though I'd
  appreciate some synchronization between the two. I'd prefer to see
  Eudora's Address Book concentrate on email-specific features. How
  about a fast search for all mail from or to selected contacts? Or
  perhaps Eudora could include contact information in headers that
  other copies of Eudora could use to populate the automatically
  generated nicknames in the History List more completely?


**Scripts on the Menu** -- Another small feature that many
  advanced Eudora users will appreciate is the addition of a Scripts
  menu that provides fast access to AppleScript scripts stored in
  the Scripts Folder (inside the Eudora Stuff folder in Eudora's
  application folder). The first item in that menu is Open Scripts
  Folder; after the Scripts Folder opens in the Finder, you can drop
  any scripts you use into it and execute them by choosing them from
  the Scripts menu. It's a nice touch, and it also enables you to
  attach scripts to toolbar buttons by Command-clicking an empty
  spot on the toolbar and choosing a script.


**Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics** -- With this next feature,
  statistics on your email usage, Eudora starts to raise the bar for
  email once again. The feature itself is mostly for fun, but it's
  unusual and provides information that we all bandy about as
  evidence of email machismo. How many email messages do you get
  every day? Thanks to Eudora's new statistics window, accessible
  from the Window menu, I know that my estimates of 150 messages per
  day were spot on. In the two months I've been using beta versions
  of Eudora 5.0, I've received an average of 148 messages per day,
  1,039 messages per week, and 4,519 messages per month. Similarly,
  I send an average of 41 messages per day, 288 per week, and 1,255
  per month. Even more interesting, Eudora tells me that I spend an
  average of 1.8 hours per day using Eudora, 12 hours per week, and
  55 hours per month. That's actual activity in Eudora, not just the
  time the application is open. Eudora happily displays all these
  statistics for the year as well.

<http://www.eudora.com/email/features/mailstats.html>

  If you click the More statistics checkbox, you can learn how your
  activities break down. I see that I spend 29 percent of my time
  reading mail, 61 percent composing, and 10 percent mucking about
  with other things. With sent mail, I can see how my outgoing mail
  breaks down by forwarded messages, replied to messages, redirected
  messages, and attachments sent. For incoming mail, I can tell how
  many attachments I've received and what percentage of my incoming
  mail I've read.

  Along with the raw numbers, Eudora draws graphs that clarify your
  patterns of sending mail, receiving mail, and using Eudora. The
  graphs also showed me that Eudora considers importing mail the
  same as receiving mail, and some tests I'd done had resulted in
  importing 1,800 messages. Since the dates on the Emailer 1.x
  messages I was importing were screwed up, Eudora counted them as
  arriving the day I did the import. I didn't want to skew my
  numbers that radically, but since Eudora actually stores the
  statistics in a straight-text XML file in the Eudora Folder, I was
  able to edit out the spike by changing some numbers.


**Mood Rings** -- Remember those mood rings from long ago that
  claimed to report your mood by changing color? I presume they
  worked on temperature - the hotter you got, the more uptight the
  mood ring claimed you were. New in Eudora 5.0 is a superficially
  similar feature called MoodWatch, which is based on work done by
  David Kaufer, chairman of the English department at Carnegie
  Mellon University. Qualcomm implemented David Kaufer's work in a
  fast algorithm that examines every message to identify words or
  phrases that some people might find offensive. The basic idea is
  to determine if what you're writing might be construed as a flame,
  or as a heads-up that an incoming message might be a flame before
  you start reading.

<http://www.eudora.com/email/features/moodwatch.html>

  MoodWatch works both on incoming messages and messages you write,
  assigning every message between zero and three chili peppers to
  indicate the level of "spiciness." Chilies appear in a new mailbox
  column, and for outgoing messages, on the right side of the window
  toolbar (for zero chilies, outgoing messages display an icon that
  could be interpreted as an ice cube to indicate you're cool).

  I was initially dubious about MoodWatch, but I seldom find myself
  disagreeing with it, although why a message receives chilies is
  occasionally confusing. For instance, ListSTAR sends me daily logs
  that often have chili ratings, which befuddled me until I realized
  that they were generally related to the subjects or senders of
  spam messages directed at my auto-replies.

  MoodWatch is mostly informational, but it does offer some
  interactivity. In the MoodWatch settings panel, you can decide if
  you want it to warn you when sending messages with a certain chili
  rating. You can also Option-click on a message's chili rating in a
  mailbox window to select all messages with the same rating.
  However, you cannot search or filter on chili ratings, because the
  entire system is sufficiently subjective that searches or filters
  could easily produce undesirable results.

  I mostly like seeing the chili ratings on the messages I'm
  writing, and just last week I reworded a hastily composed
  paragraph in a message that simply didn't need the expression that
  generated a pair of chilies. I'm a strong believer in using
  language appropriately, and if that means a message needs to go
  out with a full three-chili rating, so be it. But having Eudora
  warn me about inadvertent mistakes when I'm not paying attention
  is welcome.

  A few notes about MoodWatch: It's specific to English (and
  probably American English at that), so your results may vary when
  using other languages. It's also entirely internal to your copy of
  Eudora, so no one using other email programs will see the chili
  ratings in any way. And of course, you can always turn it off.


**ESP: Not What You're Thinking** -- Eudora 5.0's most innovative
  feature is ESP, a plug-in whose name expands to Eudora Sharing
  Protocol. At its heart, ESP is simple - it enables everyone in a
  group of Eudora users to maintain a folder whose contents are
  identical on each person's machine, with ESP automatically sending
  and receiving updates from the members of the group. It all
  happens via standard email, but without bothering you with the
  automatic messages.

<http://www.eudora.com/email/features/esp.html>

  For the most part, you don't do anything in ESP itself; it just
  works in the background, occasionally prompting you with dialogs
  when necessary. But to create or configure groups, you work within
  the plug-in's interface, accessible by choosing ESP Groups from
  the Special menu (if that item isn't present, the ESP plug-in
  isn't installed where Eudora can find it, preferably in your
  Eudora Stuff folder).

  An ESP group has several parts, including the shared folder itself
  (created by default in an ESP Groups folder in your Documents
  folder), a Eudora mailbox to store messages from the group, and
  the Eudora personality to apply to your outgoing messages to the
  group. An ESP group also contains a list of users, each of whom
  can play one of four roles: full member (send and receive
  updates), broadcasting member (send updates only), receiving
  member (receive updates only), and custom member (obey a set of
  custom actions regarding new, updated, and deleted items in the
  shared folder). The group creator uses ESP itself to invite users;
  it creates customized messages with a special attachment that the
  invitee's copy of ESP uses to configure itself to participate in
  the new group. Although the group creator can set an initial role
  for each invitee and even set a warning to appear if that person
  tries to change his or her role, control ultimately lies with each
  individual.

  When anything changes in one copy of the shared folder, ESP
  packages up the necessary files along with instructions to the
  remote copies of ESP about what actions to perform and sends the
  message out. The receiving copies of ESP then unpack the files,
  look at the instructions, and perform the necessary actions to
  keep everyone's shared folder synchronized.

  It's hard to predict exactly how people will use ESP because
  although ESP is good at maintaining multiple backups of updated
  and deleted documents, the disconnected nature of email means that
  it is possible for two people to modify the same file at the same
  time. Put simply, if you already have and rely on a single shared
  folder on a centralized server, you'll find switching to a
  distributed shared folder maintained by ESP frustrating, since you
  never know who's working on a file or if your folder has all the
  latest changes. My feeling is that ESP is not ideal for sharing
  documents that multiple people change frequently.

  Where ESP's brilliance shines through is in easing email file
  distribution among a group. For instance, I'm creating and editing
  content for a Web site right now, and I'm constantly mailing
  drafts and final copies all over the place. Worse, whenever I
  receive an edited version, it's a totally new document whose
  changes I have to merge manually. If we were using ESP, I'd only
  have to worry about the current version of the document in the
  shared folder, and I could set the number of backup versions to
  retain in case of trouble. Another use of ESP might come in
  maintaining a shared folder of family photographs, where each
  member of the family could simply drop pictures into the folder to
  send them out the entire family.

  Overall, I find ESP fascinating because it introduces intelligence
  into the process of sharing files via email, something we all do
  these days. Although you would set up ESP only if you anticipated
  an ongoing need to share files with a group, the functionality is
  sufficiently compelling that even people who must rely on other
  email programs might consider setting up a special POP email
  address (such as one via Apple's iTools or at Yahoo Mail) and
  running Eudora purely for ESP's file synchronization features.
  Luckily, ESP is cross-platform, so people using Eudora 5.0 for
  Windows can also participate in ESP groups.

<http://www.apple.com/>
<http://mail.yahoo.com/>


**Upgrade Details** -- Eudora 5.0 is the first upgrade Qualcomm
  has released since Eudora Pro 4.0 back in January of 1998 that
  requires payment from some users. Whether or not you have to pay
  depends _not_ on what version of Eudora you're currently _using_,
  but which version you last _purchased_. If you bought Eudora Pro
  4.0 or 4.2 (whether or not you've subsequently taken advantage of
  the free upgrade to 4.3), the upgrade costs $30. If, however, you
  bought Eudora 4.3 to switch from Sponsored or Light mode into Paid
  mode, the upgrade to 5.0 is free.

<http://www.eudora.com/email/upgrade/>

  If you're currently running Eudora 4.3, you can verify your
  situation and download Eudora 5.0 by first choosing Payment &
  Registration from the Help menu, and then clicking the "Find the
  Latest Update to Eudora" button (you must be connected to the
  Internet). A moment or two later, Eudora will display a window
  telling you that 5.0 is available, and if you're running in Paid
  mode, whether or not you have to pay to run 5.0 in Paid mode. It's
  a 4.7 MB download. If you have to upgrade, the first time you run
  Eudora 5.0, it will tell you that you have to pay to keep running
  in Paid mode and provide a link to pay on Qualcomm's Web site.
  Eudora will then continue to run in Paid mode for an hour to
  provide time for the transaction to be completed and so you can
  receive the registration code Qualcomm's servers will mail back to
  you.

  If you haven't already upgraded from 4.0 or 4.2 to 4.3, you must
  first upgrade to 4.3 and then follow the procedure above. If
  you're still using a version of Eudora prior to 4.0, you'll have
  to pay the full amount, which is $50.

  Of course, if you wish to use Eudora 5.0 for free, you can still
  do so in Light mode (which lacks many of Eudora's advanced
  features, including most of those mentioned above) or in Sponsored
  mode (which provides all of Eudora's features but requires you
  view ads).

  As with any upgrade, the question is whether or not the new
  version is worth the effort and cost of upgrading. With Eudora
  5.0, the answer depends significantly on your situation:

* If you bought Eudora 4.3 and will receive the upgrade for free,
  or if you rely on Eudora 4.3's full feature set in Sponsored mode,
  I recommend the upgrade.

* If you bought Eudora Pro 4.0 or 4.2 and upgraded to 4.3, I think
  the $30 upgrade is worthwhile, since you're the sort who takes
  email seriously.

* If you bought Eudora Pro 4.0 or 4.2 but never got around to
  upgrading to 4.3, I recommend thinking about whether the main new
  features in 5.0 (Scripts menu, Statistics window, MoodWatch, and
  ESP) would be worth $30 and two large downloads.

* If you use Eudora 4.3 in Light mode or like using a much older
  version of Eudora, I recommend upgrading if (or when) you discover
  something about your current version that bothers you or your
  correspondents.

  It's hard to see quite why Qualcomm chose to call this Eudora 5.0,
  rather than something like 4.5. The version number bump was
  probably influenced by the competition with Microsoft's Outlook
  Express 5.0, whose version number was artificially increased to be
  comparable with Internet Explorer 5.0.

  But more to the point, although MoodWatch and ESP are fairly major
  features, they're less compelling than the inline spelling checker
  and search functionality that appeared in Eudora Pro 4.2. And
  although Eudora 4.3's changes mostly revolved around the move to
  Light, Sponsored, and Paid modes, in some ways that change would
  have made more sense as the event to trigger an integer upgrade.
  As it is, the upgrade is most understandable by the length of time
  you've received new features from Qualcomm for free, with only
  Eudora 4.3 purchasers qualifying for a free upgrade. That turns
  out be the key - from now on, upgrades for those who have paid for
  Eudora will be free for a period of a year after you paid.

  No matter what the specifics of your situation may be, Eudora 5.0
  is a credible upgrade in multiple ways, and even if it doesn't
  address all of the program's remaining shortcomings (the entire
  filter architecture is aching for an update, for instance), it's
  worth serious consideration both as an upgrade and as a
  replacement for other email programs.

$$

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