First, I would like to thank Sergio Villar Senin of Igalia for his recent contributions to the tinymail framework. It’s because people like you enjoy working on free software like tinymail, that we have a community and actual code that does something interesting.
His contributions implement various fixes and features including support for transferring messages between folders, subscribing and unsubscribing folders, support for adding queries to the current default folder view GtkTreeModel (for example letting it only show the subscribed folders, or only folders whose name and/or id match a regular expression) and a lot other things. He’s among the people who are making the ChangeLog look impressive.
This is of course a thank you to all the people who have been supporting me and who will support me in building tinymail. It grew from a little garage experiment, to what it is today. I promise that I will let it grow even more (in maturity, not in memory size).
It’s important to have contributors. Psychologically for me this means that people like my stuff so much that they want to put their own time in it. Thanks for your support and contributions Sergio.
Myself, I have been working on making it possible to display mssage/rfc822 mime parts (inlined messages like forwards). Well, it’s already working. I just need to fine tune the ui components a little bit now, and figure out why the second rfc822 mime part’s header is unusable. The interesting part is that the underlying tinymail infrastructure now supports, of course using existing Camel functionality, multipart mime parts like message/rfc822 and that the user interface components which ship with tinymail support viewing those correctly or will and/or can support it. In other words: that in design this is possible today. It’s just one of those milestones.
Hmm, I’m starting to wonder why that date is in 1974. Probably some converting problem. todo.prepend() :-\
Oh, Koen also made new testing packages for Ångström.