Xref: utzoo unix-pc.general:905 comp.sys.att:3597 Path: utzoo!utgpu!water!watmath!uunet!ukma!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!mailrus!ames!amdahl!rtech!llama!daveb From: daveb@llama.rtech.UUCP (Dave Brower) Newsgroups: unix-pc.general,comp.sys.att Subject: Re: Mailer questions and a Curses bug (was: mailx for 3b1 ver 3.0) Message-ID: <2211@rtech.rtech.com> Date: 24 Jun 88 17:23:48 GMT References: <8014@alice.UUCP> Sender: news@rtech.rtech.com Organization: Relational Technology, Inc. Alameda, CA Lines: 20 In article <8014@alice.UUCP> wilber@alice.UUCP writes: >Right now I'm still using ye olde crufty standard-issue-out-of-the-box mail, >but I read and write mail with Emac's rmail. I would like to know what >advantages, if any, there are to using one of mailx, smail, mush, etc., for >someone who uses Emacs. Emacs mail is fine. Selection of a mail interface is a religious war, but mailx, elm, mush and emacs are all lightyears ahead of SV /bin/mail. If you are comfortable with one, then you don't really need any of the others. You *do* want to install smail, however. It is not a user interface, but a smarter delivery agent. The main thing it does is map user@place to a bang path (somewhere!elsewhere!place!user) for delivery by uucp. It also handles forwarding and aliasing, so you can, for instance, have mail for root, postmaster, daemon, uucp and news turn up in your mailbox instead of having to su to a bunch of different users. -dB {amdahl, cpsc6a, mtxinu, sun, hoptoad}!rtech!daveb daveb@rtech.com <- FINALLY!