FROM : Birch Browning
DATE : Sun Jun 04 06:03:07 2006
> Message: 3
> Date: Sat, 3 Jun 2006 13:04:28 -0500
> From: Derrick Bass <<email_removed>>
> Subject: Re: Can NSMailDelivery be configured programmatically?
> To: Apple Cocoa List <<email_removed>>
> Message-ID: <<email_removed>>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; delsp=yes; format=flowed
>
> On Jun 3, 2006, at 4:00 AM, Andrew Farmer wrote:
>
>> The fact is, unfortunately, that there's really no good way to
>> script the
>> sending of
>> mail from a Cocoa application. If you're using mail as a method of
>> "calling home",
>
> That's quite unfortunate. IIRC, when you first set up a Mac, the
> setup
> programs asks you for your ISP settings, so I was hoping that I
> could tap
> into that interface. I also seem to recall that in a previous
> version of Mac
> OS X, these settings were in a System Preferences pane.
>
> Anyway, the application is not phoning home. It is facilitating work
> on a
> group project that has some parts that require long computations. So
> it
> performs a long task and then notifies whomever the user wanted when
> the
> task is done, so that the next person who needs to work on the
> project knows
> that their piece is ready to be worked on.
>
> Derrick
Check out the Pantomime Framework at
http://www.collaboration-world.com/pantomime
There are sample programs (POP, IMAP & SMTP I believe).
Boomer
DATE : Sun Jun 04 06:03:07 2006
> Message: 3
> Date: Sat, 3 Jun 2006 13:04:28 -0500
> From: Derrick Bass <<email_removed>>
> Subject: Re: Can NSMailDelivery be configured programmatically?
> To: Apple Cocoa List <<email_removed>>
> Message-ID: <<email_removed>>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII; delsp=yes; format=flowed
>
> On Jun 3, 2006, at 4:00 AM, Andrew Farmer wrote:
>
>> The fact is, unfortunately, that there's really no good way to
>> script the
>> sending of
>> mail from a Cocoa application. If you're using mail as a method of
>> "calling home",
>
> That's quite unfortunate. IIRC, when you first set up a Mac, the
> setup
> programs asks you for your ISP settings, so I was hoping that I
> could tap
> into that interface. I also seem to recall that in a previous
> version of Mac
> OS X, these settings were in a System Preferences pane.
>
> Anyway, the application is not phoning home. It is facilitating work
> on a
> group project that has some parts that require long computations. So
> it
> performs a long task and then notifies whomever the user wanted when
> the
> task is done, so that the next person who needs to work on the
> project knows
> that their piece is ready to be worked on.
>
> Derrick
Check out the Pantomime Framework at
http://www.collaboration-world.com/pantomime
There are sample programs (POP, IMAP & SMTP I believe).
Boomer
| Related mails | Author | Date |
|---|---|---|
| Derrick Bass | Jun 3, 09:16 | |
| Dominic Blais | Jun 3, 09:25 | |
| Andrew Farmer | Jun 3, 11:00 | |
| Derrick Bass | Jun 3, 20:04 | |
| Dominic Blais | Jun 3, 20:04 | |
| Dominic Blais | Jun 3, 20:17 | |
| Derrick Bass | Jun 3, 21:54 | |
| Andrew Farmer | Jun 3, 22:31 | |
| Birch Browning | Jun 4, 06:03 | |
| Chris Suter | Jun 4, 06:25 |






Cocoa mail archive

