Chapter 8. Reading and Sending Mail with Evolution

IN THIS CHAPTER

  • Setting up your e-mail client

  • Sending and receiving mail

  • Organizing your e-mail

  • Filing e-mail

  • Dealing with SPAM

After Web browsers, e-mail is the Internet's killer application. Like Web browsers, there are many different client applications for sending and receiving e-mail, especially in the open source community. In addition (and unfortunately unlike Web browsing, which basically uses HTML everywhere) there are many different protocols used to send e-mail. Your choice of an e-mail client can therefore depend to some extent on whether it supports the protocols that your Internet Service Provider (ISP), business, or academic institution uses to send, store, and deliver e-mail.

The easiest solution to the "which protocol, which client" problem is to use a single e-mail client that speaks every modern e-mail protocol known to man. Ubuntu includes an e-mail client known as Evolution, which lives up to this promise. Evolution is a GNOME-based mailer that was originally developed by a company called Ximian. Oddly enough, Ximian was eventually acquired by Novell, whose SUSE Linux product is largely KDE-centric, but it's at least clear that Novell knows good software when they see it.

Evolution can receive mail from mail servers that speak all of the popular e-mail protocols including POP, IMAP, IMAP4rev1, Microsoft Exchange, Novell GroupWise, and a few that would require a Google search to figure out who uses them (and why)." For ...

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