On Wed, Mar 5, 2014 at 4:58 PM, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
Heh. If you use gmail's web interface, you don't even care about how someone responds. It will automatically hide the parts you've already seen, regardless of how they are quoted or whether they are above/below the new parts. It replaces them with ellipses (...) that
Oh, what a wonderful interface... for folks who have no memory, or care where a conversation's been.
I don't think you get it. It caters exactly to both of those situations. The things you have already read are conveniently out of the way, assuming that you'll remember them and not want to waste the screen space - yet displayed at a click without a full screen redraw if you want them.
Thanks for giving me another reason (I should want to search inside an email that's maybe 40 or 60 lines long, to see what someone said?) that I *never* want to use it.
No, the search is for other things that might be anywhere in your mailbox or subfolders. Remember just a few words? - no problem. Want messages in threads you have responded to before but might have missed the last reply back? - easy, and fast.
Also, I'm willing to bet that that Outlook Web server that you are ranting about is the decade+ old 2003 version. The 2010 version is not bad at all (and I say that reluctantly, not being a big MS fan in general). Sometimes newer is better. Especially 10 years newer.
Nope, they've upgraded us to 2010 last year. The one good thing is that they seem to have gotten rid of the vile ActiveX controls in the calendar, and I now can see and turn off the "send reminders every 15 min by default" when I've scheduled vacation time w/ my manager in firefox, rather than having to go home, and fire up the work WonDoze laptop.....
I find the 2010 version very usable from a Mac/firefox window with no ActiveX. I almost never bother firing up a vpn on a laptop to run outlook at home just for mail-related things.