![]() Adding the message details to the corpus is a good idea, but a rule for every single email sender isn’t maintainable in the long run. ![]() Or at least perform the training and edit the rule to be more general and work on more than a single message. Moving forward, if rules are needed, I will add them to the block instead of training them as spam. It also looks like the same incorrect usage I had. That looks like a performance and maintenance nightmare. ![]() While that seems like a total exaggeration, and nothing I’ve experienced yet, I’ve seen screenshots with 20k blocklist rules. Messages will take 10 minutes to get delivered and the entire system will come to a crawl. If you keep that up, SpamSieve will be so choked with rules it will suffocate under its own weight.Ī message will filter through 20k rules only for it to not match any criteria. They are too specific and will work once, then never again. I still think that’s an issue with the way SpamSieve builds rules when you Train as Spam. Checking for a sender of or is pointless. None of those rules were worth keeping as they were too specific. And to be honest, those are kind of spammy, even though not actual spam.Īfter realizing my mistake, I deleted the Blocklist and started over. ![]() It’s now up and running correctly, tossing away 40+ messages a day with only two or three being false positives. Simply put, I missed a step, which prevented the filtering of messages. MailMate - it’s $50.To be fair, the initial problem with SpamSieve not detecting spam messages was a configuration issue on my part. No idea why I did all this, I think I was trying to mitigate the onslaught of broken code from El Capitan for years. I have also in one instance moved the User home folder to another separate external SSD. I have several Macs, and have installed macOS on several different external SSD’s. I’ve performed many OS-reinstalls over the past two years. beta!Įach time Apple Mail dove into a state of complete inability to run, was with a of clean install. I kind of can’t believe Apple Mail runs perfectly now, no crashes, on the High Sierra beta. Email in a sense is the most important method of communication, with push notifications and the ability to generate endless email accounts to help organize a life or business. If it’s the most powerful - then definitely. Since (from my perspective) you’re far more aware of the current state email, I’ll check out MailMate. So would just Make a habit of force-quitting Apple Mail at least 9 out of 10 times I’d run it, every thirty minutes or so. It’s weird how Apple Mail was completely non-operable, dysfunctional/ broken, and I didn’t really have a better way to replace it. Thanks a lot for posting this info in the thread/ question(s) I asked. Does SpamSieve do anything else? I mean it’s genius, brilliant, it brings full control over all email.īasically, should I go and drop 40 dollars on PostBox now because it’s perfect, and SpamSieve works the most efficiently with that app. SpamSieve opens with Mail, and the two options - train as good/ train as spam are in a menu. I guess the integration really doesn’t go that deep when I think about it. Which is strange.īut how is SpamSieve’s integration with PostBox? I just wonder about PostBox, it seems like it’s the absolute best email client in the universe for macOS. And SpamSieve is setup, I had to update to a beta version of SpamSieve, but it works. ![]() I have Apple Mail open now, and it’s working. I’m on the High Sierra beta now, and it’s the first time in years my email is not crashing. It advertises itself as a super powerful app on the same level as Photoshop. The only app I haven’t tried is PostBox(sp). I’ve tried AirMail (sp), Spark… They also crash. I have each mail account set up textbook, The right mail servers, the right ports, username and password correct… It’s kind of frustrating to try to run a business with email that fails constantly, and barely works. It either instantly crashes, or works for a minute, then crashes (not responding) Two Years every day, all day, 9 out of 10 times I launch Apple Mail it crashes. I run a business and have 40-50 email accounts active at a time.Īpple Mail was always the client I used, it’s the most integrated into the OS, it’s familiar, just used to the ecosystem. The main issue is, I have been struggling in a bit of a crisis ever since El Capitan came out. SpamSieve is great, it’s definitely a must-have for anyone who uses email these days (everyone). Which app is most integrated with/ optimal/ superior, etc. Not sure why I feel strange asking this question, I think I’m not sure how to phrase it. ![]()
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