At that point, the SpamSieve rules marked it as spam and moved it to Junk. Then, I did an Apply All Rules to that message. Looking in the error logs, I see this message:Ģ/11/15 13:21:44.169 rick: Outlook SpamSieve Outlook could not get the source of message: Can this 10 Second Trick Help Prevent YOUR Heart Attack?Īnd there was nothing matching this message in SpamSieve’s log. It was not moved to Junk by SpamSieve’s rules, but the Not in Contacts category was applied by the last rule. There was a message still in my inbox subject: “Can this 10 Second Trick Help Prevent YOUR Heart Attack?”. Here’s an example from the logs: Time now about 14:48 local, 19:48 UTC. Is there a log file that we can capture when this occurs to get a better idea what’s going on? I could record the screen on morning startup if that helps. So it appears that the first SpamSieve rule is somehow skipping some messages on the first pass, even though it marks them when the rule is re-applied. However, if after all this, I select these messages and Apply All Rules, SpamSieve then marks and moves the messages to the Junk folder. This tells me that the rules were processed and got down the the final rule, but somehow SpamSieve didn’t mark the message. I will see some others get marked “Not in Contacts” but not moved even though they look like junk. As I watch them get processed (Outlook in the foreground), I can see some being marked and moved to the Junk folder. I’ve removed all rules in the local rule set except the three SpamSieve rules plus one more, after those three, that marks messages with a category “Not in Contacts” if the sender is not in Outlook’s contacts.Īs and example of what happens when I first fire up Outlook in the morning… I receive a large number of messages. PS - Have you checked out Microsoft Outlook? It really is quite good also.It’s been a few months and I’ve been watching this to try to narrow it down. Still using Spark on iOS and Mac, I’m going to consider the subscription regardless of needing/wanting the new features, because folks have to generate revenue to maintain development. The one killer feature is the filter based smart inbox, however it doesn’t support matching text in the email itself, making it almost useless for me. I keep checking airmail to see if the overall design has hit the mark (spoiler, for me it hasn’t but it does keep improving. Helps avoid emailing using the wrong account and also ensures that I resist (as much as possible) the temptation (or accidental distraction) of checking work email outside business hours as much as possible. I’m the type that I something is in the product, my mind always tells me that I need it.Ĭ) Apple Mail has come along quite a way, has the core feature set…īUT I use Apple Mail for my work email, as a result I like to keep my private email in a different app. I have to admit that my love for Spark has taken a step backwards with the latest release, why?Ī) Overall stability on iOS, app crashes and an odd issue where I reopen the app, if an email is open I get some basic headers but then the main message body is empty.ī) Subscription, I get they need to fund the project, that nothing was taken away and this is just to get new features, however Au$12.99 a month (annual sub $66 or $5.5 a month) just doesn’t translate to value for me, as I only use this for my personal email.
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