On Saturday 04 April 2015 17:24:23 Lisi Reisz wrote:
On Saturday 04 April 2015 20:30:08 Roy J. Tellason,
Sr. wrote:
On Saturday 04 April 2015 12:07:42 pm Gene
Heskett wrote:
On Saturday 04 April 2015 09:19:35 Karsten Lahrs
wrote:
> First of all: sorry for my double post. (I
have not seen my
> own first post, so I thout I have not send it)
Thats just one of the disadvantages of using gmail. Your original
post, returned from the mailing list server, is considered a a
duplicate and summarily deleted by gmail. And it is NOT open for
discussion as far as gmail is concerned, millions have squawked.
The solution is to use a different mail server, such as the one
your ISP provides. However I am not as my ISP, Shentel, farmed
their email server out to gmail about 2 years ago, so I am using a
qmail install I helped setup at my former employers, and which I
have a lifetime account on.
My ISP uses a rebranded gmail account as well. :-(
The one workaround that I've seen that confirms that something made
it out there is to cc it to yourelf. Annoying, that...
I've got several emails in this thread missing, and they are not in my
spam folder either. Weird and somewhat annoying. How much else is
going missing? I know some is. :-(
Lisi
Oh dear... Since you also are posting from a gmail account, and the list
echo is deleted, that is not surprising. Cc: yourself, or find a
different, non gmail, mail server to use would be my best
recommendation. Cc'ing yourself is no guarantee the list got it, so
while it would probably serve the purpose, it comes with no warranty.
Much the same thing could be accomplished if we could train our email
agents to store the sent mail in the list folder it was in at the time,
but that comes with the same null & void warranty. It has not made
the "round trip", meaning everyone on the associated list will see it.
Cheers, Gene Heskett
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
Genes Web page <http://geneslinuxbox.net:6309/gene>