Hi Rubyists,
Cropmail – A Ruby MDA. Sort and delazaridify your mail
using plain Ruby statements.
http://opensource.bertram-scharpf.de/distfiles/cropmail-0.1.tar.gz
Gentoo users may use the portage overlay (in case it is not
reachable the archived tree):
rsync://bertram-scharpf.homelinux.com/bscharpf
http://opensource.bertram-scharpf.de/overlays/bscharpf.tar.gz
CVS:
cvs -d
:pserver:[email protected]:/var/cvsroot/open login
cvs -d
:pserver:[email protected]:/var/cvsroot/open
export -r V0_9 cropmail
May it be useful.
A Merry Christmas to all!
Bertram
Bertram S. wrote:
Hi Rubyists,
Cropmail – A Ruby MDA. Sort and delazaridify your mail
using plain Ruby statements.
http://opensource.bertram-scharpf.de/distfiles/cropmail-0.1.tar.gz
Sounds neat. Is there a project home page with more information?
–
James B.
“People want simple stories.”
Hi,
Am Montag, 25. Dez 2006, 02:58:13 +0900 schrieb James B.:
Bertram S. wrote:
Cropmail – A Ruby MDA. Sort and delazaridify your mail
using plain Ruby statements.
http://opensource.bertram-scharpf.de/distfiles/cropmail-0.1.tar.gz
Sounds neat. Is there a project home page with more information?
I would like to have one. Anybody out there who could find
the launch worth a contribution? First of all, of course,
one should serve a minimum community of readers.
Bertram
On Mon, 2006-12-25 at 01:06 +0900, Bertram S. wrote:
Hi Rubyists,
Cropmail – A Ruby MDA. Sort and delazaridify your mail
using plain Ruby statements.
How does this relate to Gurgitate-mail? any comparison?
On 12/24/06, Bertram S. [email protected] wrote:
rsync://bertram-scharpf.homelinux.com/bscharpf
A Merry Christmas to all!
Bertram
Please excuse my ignorance but what is “delazaridify” ?
./alex
.w( the_mindstorm )p.
Bertram S. wrote:
I would like to have one. Anybody out there who could find
the launch worth a contribution? First of all, of course,
one should serve a minimum community of readers.
You could have a project page on rubyforge.org.
–
James B.
“The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance, but the illusion
of knowledge.”
On 12/24/06, Alexandru P. [email protected]
wrote:
A Merry Christmas to all!
Bertram
Please excuse my ignorance but what is “delazaridify” ?
Heh.
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-talk/139511
Hi,
Am Montag, 25. Dez 2006, 11:38:48 +0900 schrieb Aredridel:
On Mon, 2006-12-25 at 01:06 +0900, Bertram S. wrote:
Cropmail – A Ruby MDA. Sort and delazaridify your mail
using plain Ruby statements.
How does this relate to Gurgitate-mail? any comparison?
I wrote a lot of code to handle multipart messages,
different encodings, character sets, and long-wound
From-fields. (I need this for advanced detection of spam and
of people who answer to trolls.) These parts would be more
work to integrate them into Gurgitate than giving them an
own frame of delivery classes. Though, I admit I learned a
lot from Gurgitate.
Bertram
On 12/25/06, Wilson B. [email protected] wrote:
reachable the archived tree):
May it be useful.
Heh.
http://blade.nagaokaut.ac.jp/cgi-bin/scat.rb/ruby/ruby-talk/139511
Hehe… I thought I am crazy to think about that… and considered it
is better to ask. Now, what exactly is this library doing?
./alex
Hi,
Am Montag, 25. Dez 2006, 02:58:13 +0900 schrieb James B.:
Bertram S. wrote:
Cropmail – A Ruby MDA. Sort and delazaridify your mail
using plain Ruby statements.
http://opensource.bertram-scharpf.de/distfiles/cropmail-0.1.tar.gz
Sounds neat. Is there a project home page with more information?
Here it is:
http://opensource.bertram-scharpf.de/sites/cropmail/
Bertram
Hi,
Am Montag, 25. Dez 2006, 17:44:55 +0900 schrieb Alexandru P.:
Hehe… I thought I am crazy to think about that… and considered it
is better to ask. Now, what exactly is this library doing?
It is doing the same as Procmail. To be really sure to catch every
attempt of spammers to hide their real nature you may decend to the
decoded parts of a message.
Bertram
Bertram S. wrote:
Here it is:
http://opensource.bertram-scharpf.de/sites/cropmail/
Thanks!
–
James B.
“I can see them saying something like ‘OMG Three Wizards Awesome’”