![]() ![]() ![]() They should both have plenty of horsepower. I am using a G5 Quad processor with 8GB memory as my desktop machine and a Mac Book Pro with 2GB memory as my laptop. I guess I am questioning whether the problem is truly Corpus file size related. Given that I only use one of the machines for email a few times a week or when traveling. I actually was surprised that these were so similar in size. The Corpus window displays “3,745 messages 142,657 words” on one machine and “3,577 messages 129,211 words” for the other machine. They do not have identical corpus files although they were initially trained on the same messages. Thus, I expect that my laptop sees far fewer real spam messages than my desktop machine. While the fix you have suggested at first appeared to work, I was a bit surprised because I use the machines independently of each other where the main machine tends to process all of the Spam, I leave Mail up when I’m away so that if I retrieve email from my mobile phone my inbox will be spam free. However, before doing so, it did update the Inbox messages where previously it was only showing messages as of three days ago. ![]() I could not quit Mail and had to Force Quit it. Note, on it’s first operation it seemed to get stuck on “Evaluating a message” in the Acitivity window. Mail 3.1 under Leopard then began to work. On the machine, which was still having problems, I then followed your instruction for renaming the Corpus file. Prior to checking this forum, I assumed it was a Leopard/Mail/Spamsieve interaction problem so I rebooted one of my machines using 10.4.11 and started using Apple Mail 2.1 with SpamSieve 2.6.5 and did not have any problems. In my case the problem occurred on two machines, my main machine where I do 90% of my email and my laptop. It had been occurring for the past three or four days. In fact I had assumed this was some variant of the Mail HTML problem. Just a tip: these apps are interesting and useful experiments, but take a look at Astro’s privacy policy before securing access to your email box.I have been experiencing a similar problem. It works with Office 365 and Gmail addresses, and developers are working to extend support to iCloud, Yahoo!, Hotmail, and other email services operating through IMAP. The app is still in public beta and available for Mac, iOS, Android, Alexa, Slack. Since last week, Astrobot also integrates with Slack and Alexa, so it’ll always be available when you work (on Slack), or you’re home (through the Amazon Echo). For example, if it finds we are exchanging many emails with a particular contact, it will suggest to include him in a “VIP” contacts list.Īstro integrates a bot (in apps is located below the list of used accounts) that guides you only when it thinks is necessary to intervene on some message (“it seems to me that you have not yet responded to John, do you want to do it now?”). Thanks to AI, it analyzes all the messages we receive and our interactions with these, suggesting new behaviors every time it thinks it’s necessary. Okay, Gmail already does something like that, but Astro’s peculiarity is that also uses Artificial Intelligence. Have you ever missed some important emails? Do you receive too many newsletters? Do you sometimes forget if you answered to an email the day you were supposed to do it? It happens a lot to us, more than we like to admit.Īstro is an email client (or better an email app) that tries to overcome inconveniences and forgetfulnesses by receiving your digital correspondence and subdividing it into two large groups: Priority, where you can find messages coming from contacts that Astro thinks are important to you, and Other where you can read all the rest (newsletters, commercial messages, occasional contacts). ![]()
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