Changes

Evolution Email

6,272 bytes added, 14:37, 14 August 2019
/* Evolution forgets SMTP password */
The following lines were added (+) and removed (-):
Evolution (Linux/UNIX Version)[[File:evolution318.png|thumb|none|250px]]50star.pngEvolution (Linux/UNIX Version)*    Excellent Interface*    <del>Excellent Interface</del>*    The best email software available for *NIX platform== Review ==[[Image:30star.png]]Linux Version.  Updated for Evolution 3.18.5.2, 2008 - 2014 The Evolution Team aka Redhat?When first created, this page was about Ximian Evolution.  Since then Evolution has went though some owners, seen improvements, and also suffered from new bugs, a lack of support community, and design deficiency cancer that is plaguing Linux distributions across the board since 2010 and onward.Evolution is part of GNOME development.  Ximian Evolution became Novell Evolution in 2003.  GNOME was another holding of Novell.  Novell acquired Evolution in May 2004 and the most positive change made was licensing changes.  Novell made all plugin components of Evolution free.  In 2011 a company called The Attachmate Group acquired Evolution from Novell.  It transferred Novell's former Evolution developers to its subsidiary SUSE. In 2012 SUSE decided to stop its funding of Evolution's development.  Evolution development then went to Redhat and became more active in 2013 as the story goes.  At what point Evolution began going south and went from a 5-star software to 3.5 out of 5 is not clear, but as of 2018 Evolution maintains the lower rating.  In the absence of alternatives for Outlook / Exchange Server like functionality, and Exchange Server integration, Evolution is still being recommended.  It it is just that using Evolution in 2018 requires a great deal of anger management as opposed to previous years.''There is NO WAY to hide obnoxious error messages that are in part due to bugs in Evolution, and other times often at the ISP end that the end user can do nothing about, yet a big annoying error message takes over the entire top half of the message view window.  - This is an example of the suck factor in today's Evolution.''Support Community - this is a joke.  The primary support community is an EMAIL LIST, so you need to have Evolution working to use the EMAIL list if Evolution is your EMAIL client.  Including this, there is very little support community around Evolution.  An Internet search for basic Evolution problems yields very little data.  There is no Company Name or Management Group name to include in the Internet search, only GNOME "GNOME Evolution help" or something like that, and there's still very little in results.Lousy PITA email list: http://gnome-evolution-general.1774414.n4.nabble.com/== General Usage ===== Various Views Including Email, Contacts, and Calendar ===Hotkey combinations quickly get you to all the views* CTRL + 1 = default email messages view* CTRL + 2 = view contacts* CTRL + 3 = view calendar* CTRL + 4 = tasks* CTRL + 5 = memosUsing the clickable "Switcher"The label on the third row top left just above the side bar indicates things like "Sent, Personal, Calendar, Tasks, Memos" to indicate what the primary window interface is displaying.  The switcher is at the bottom of the side bar and it lets you switch between the Evolution tools: Mail, Contacts, Calendars, Memos and Tasks.[[File:evolutionswitcher.jpg]]=== Howto Find the Address Book ===Ref: version 3.18.x looking under the menus at the top there is NOTHING THAT SAYS ADDRESS BOOK!  Good grief how damn annoying is that?  It is referred to as "Contacts" or Contact List and Evolution allows for multiple contact lists.  Viewing contacts happens in the same window interface as does viewing mail.  Many other email software opens contacts or address book in a new window interface.  Evolution does not.  However, as inconsistent as it is, Evolution will open a new interface when you begin to add a new contact.To Open and View Contacts:* CTRL+2 or click on CONTACTS in the SWITCHER at the bottom of the side barTo Add a new Contact:* click FILE -> NEW -> CONTACT or simply press CTRL+SHFT+C== Command Line Options == evolution --offlineStarts Evolution in offline mode. evolution --disable-previewDisables all the preview panes when you launch Evolution. It lets Evolution not to open the last crashed message, task or contact when you restart Evolution. Thus, it provides a way to avoid system crash caused by previewing message, task or contact. evolution mailto:nicolep@robotz.netStarts Evolution and begins composing a message to the e-mail address listed. evolution -c mailStarts Evolution in mail mode. evolution -c calendarStarts Evolution in calendar mode. evolution -c contactsStarts Evolution in contacts mode. evolution --force-shutdownForces every part of Evolution to shut down immediately. evolution ”%s”Makes Evolution your default e-mail handler for your Web browser and in the GNOME Control Center.Be advised, after a crash or some other unknown alignment of the planets it seems that spell checking will stop working again and you have to go in and select the language again.If you need to select an aspell language, it is: en_US:aspell so Installing aspell-en if not installed gives you a working dictionary for Evolution.  You can also use alternative dictionaries.  sudo apt install aspell-en=== Evolution forgets SMTP password ===[https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/evolution/+bug/1299604 Ubuntu / Evolution Bug Report: evolution keeps asking for password] Evolution uses "Keyring" to manage account passwords under Ubuntu / Mint / Gnome Linux. A program called "seahorse" is included with Gnome or Mint under typical installations under the name "Passwords and Keys."It seems that if Evolution has trouble connecting to the SMTP mail server, just once, it will trash all the saved passwords for SMTP mail account in keyring.  This is clearly a bug in Evolution that the devs refuse to address.Once this happens, user must close exit out of Evolution and then go into keyring "otherwise known as Passwords and Keys" and use the search tool to enter "Evolution" then delete all Evolution entries.  Close keyring, open Evolution, send email and enter the password so Evolution creates new keyring entries for each email SMTP account.  Better yet, do a search for Mail Transport - smtpand only remove those if you use pop or imap to receive and SMTP to send, this way you are only resetting SMTP keyring passwords assuming your problem is being prompted for a password when attempting to send time and time again.
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