appleinsider.com — Mail in Mac OS X has progressively grown from the simple mail client Apple included with the first builds of Mac OS X into one of the best email solutions for the Mac, and certainly the most popular. As the default app for email on the Mac, Mail gets lots of feature requests and lots of complaints when things don't work as expected.
Oct 15, 2007 View in Crawl 4
fenrisulfOct 15, 2007
Yep, it does. No more need for hacks (good thing too, since a lot of the plugin support went away).
blubiOct 15, 2007
Watch out! He links to trojan you download by accessing that page (9bary01l.exe: Trojan.Dropper-2557).Buried and reported...
itstillmovesOct 15, 2007
I was just wondering: If you market a Finder-like application for Mac OS, is it then possible to sue Apple (anti-trust lawsuit) because you can't uninstall it? It's a thin line and I'm not really sure how you decide what is or isn't allowed.
odineyeOct 15, 2007
While I'll agree that it would be nice to have .Mac directly offer it's own domains, there are fairly easy solutions for this that still allow use of Mail.app. Simply forward your e-mail account with your own domain name to your .Mac mail address, and add your domain e-mail address to the accounts in Mail.app. This allows you to receive your e-mails from the domain-name e-mail and send out from that same address. One of the things I really like about my Mac is the fact that if I can think of it, there's usually already a solution there.
etx313Oct 16, 2007
Sweet. Can't wait to run it on my hackentosh. New MB is in the mail!
pendolinoNov 6, 2007
i use outlook on parallels to access exchange and, save for the random windows crash, works well most of the time. keep in mind that i use parallels only to run outlook and the odd office application but that's it. any more and i would have blue screens all over the place i suspect.
pendolinoNov 6, 2007
must be what they do most of the time while their outsourced programmers overseas put together the software (just kidding guys).