The Yin and the Yang of Apple Mail

One of the timgaden presentations in the world wide web is a bit curious. Tim Gaden goes swimming, time of the year is not the summer, but winter with snow everywhere in the surroundings. He is not swimming in a heated pool or a swimming arena, but in a natural lake with fish and ducks. Indeed such a behavior is really odd.

But it might have a simple reason. Perhaps he has difficulties with a spinal disk, which means in German (Bandscheibe). Spinal and back disorder can be caused by myogelosis of the back's muscles. We hope this is the reason and not his Bandscheibe. In such a case swimming is a recommended therapy . Swimming helps to relax the tense muscles. Nevertheless Tim Gaden has a bad advisor. It is urgently recommended to take a hot and not a cold bath. We will see whether he'll change his mind (Gelenk).

This entry was posted on Wednesday, September 28th, 2005 at 10:10 am and is filed under Apple Mail. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
2 Responses to “The Yin and the Yang of Apple Mail”

1.
Bruno Rodrigues says:
28 September 2005, 5:19 pm at 5:19 pm

Hello.
I was terrible fed up with Apple Mail when used with Courier IMAP server. Independently of any bug in Courier, Apple Mail worked well in 10.3.9 but not as good in 10.4.x. This was my biggest complaint.
Now I’m using a Dovecot server and not having major problems. Apple Mail still freezes, still shows the wrong new message count near the folders, still corrupts the cache every six month and other bad issues, but it’s a lot less bad than before.
If I would give a score to Apple Mail, I would give a 8 to Panther’s Mail, a 4 to 10.4.0/1’s Mail, and a 7 to the latest 10.4.2 version.
2.
Hawk Wings » Blog Archive » More Yang: Restoring balance to the Force says:
6 October 2005, 9:10 pm at 9:10 pm

[...] Just over a week ago, I trawled the blogs of the world looking for user experiences with Apple Mail. I found more unhappy than happy users, which was slightly depressing–“The Yin and the Yang of Apple Mail”. [...]