"dev" wrote:
>
> An alternative worth considering is the SeaMonkey suite (formerly
> Mozilla, and similar to the bloated NetScape). It has an email client
> that, while not perfect, works very well. The NEW flag clears.
>
> Further, with correctly configured filters, nearly 100% of SPAM is hosed.
> I rely on a "white list", allowing only plain text messages from sources
> not in my address book. Over 100 spam messages are shunted to TRASH
> daily, where I check occasionally and delete them after a quick review.
>
> If you do not normally receive DESIRED unsolicited mail from sources
> not in your address book, as is the case with many users, then this
> approach might be right for you. Or, if you prefer, SeaMonkey
> has a built in "learning filter"...
>
> There is also the FireFox browser/Thunderbird mail combo - each a
> separate client. Very similar to SeaMonkey. Read about it at
> http://www.mozilla.org/projects/seamonkey/
>
I've used Thunderbird, Eudora and Outlook in the past, and they are all good
mail clients. The one thing that Windows Mail has going for it is it's
simplicity. I ended taking a different approach and wrote my own mail client.
It has far better search and filtering capabilities and multi-threaded
sending and receiving etc. While it does not have all of the features of
Outlook (yet <g>) it does a very good job indeed (and does some things that
Outlook doesn't do). It also synchronises with Outlook and Outlook Express.
On that note, does anyone have any idea of how to access the Windows Mail
data, and if any API or documentation is provided for it? I have looked
around, but I can't seem to find anything on MSDN or even via Google.