time
Storage? I am Storage!
Over the last couple of weeks, I've been trialling a few different email clients, particularly with regard to spam filtering. I don't get much spam compared to many people, but it's a growing problem.
I used Spamhilator with my regular email software for comparison. Here's my rankings so far:
1. Thunderbird 0.8. The filter was slow to learn, but increasingly accurate. I'm impressed.
2. Foxmail 5.0. Just a whisker behind TB, yet this is without Bayesian filtering, which doesn't kick in until you've accumulated 1000 messages each of ham and spam! The automatic rules-based filters worked well right from the start and just get better and better. I'd assume that once the Bayesian filtering kicked in, this product would be awesome.
3. Spamhilator. A fair way behind the first two with both false positives and negatives, but satisfactory.
4. Barca (Poco Mail). A sophisticated Outlook alternative with scheduling etc - pity it's got version 1 syndrome (bugs, missing options and no doco). The spam filtering started fairly well but drooped as time went on, despite my efforts to tweak it. I hope they can improve it; it's a nice looking product.
5. Opera (M2). Not too bad to start with, but I couldn't work out how you're supposed to change spam back to ham when wrongly identified, so I lost interest. I included it because I know a couple of people who use it, plus it uses standard Mbox storage.
6. iScribe. Unfortunately, the version I tried had a bug that stopped it learning to identify spam at all. The latest version just crashes when I try to do anything with spam messages, and I couldn't find any intermediate versions of the software. It's quite possible that my data is corrupt. A shame, because Scribe is the only product that has the wit to keep suspected spam separate from confirmed spam (apart from Spamhilator). It's really quite tedious peering at a long list of spam checking for what's new.
Only Spamhilator allows you to properly convert spam to ham when it's been misclassified. The others let you flag it easily enough, but fail to move it from the junk folder back to your inbox. Very irritating.
What's other people's experience?
I used Spamhilator with my regular email software for comparison. Here's my rankings so far:
1. Thunderbird 0.8. The filter was slow to learn, but increasingly accurate. I'm impressed.
2. Foxmail 5.0. Just a whisker behind TB, yet this is without Bayesian filtering, which doesn't kick in until you've accumulated 1000 messages each of ham and spam! The automatic rules-based filters worked well right from the start and just get better and better. I'd assume that once the Bayesian filtering kicked in, this product would be awesome.
3. Spamhilator. A fair way behind the first two with both false positives and negatives, but satisfactory.
4. Barca (Poco Mail). A sophisticated Outlook alternative with scheduling etc - pity it's got version 1 syndrome (bugs, missing options and no doco). The spam filtering started fairly well but drooped as time went on, despite my efforts to tweak it. I hope they can improve it; it's a nice looking product.
5. Opera (M2). Not too bad to start with, but I couldn't work out how you're supposed to change spam back to ham when wrongly identified, so I lost interest. I included it because I know a couple of people who use it, plus it uses standard Mbox storage.
6. iScribe. Unfortunately, the version I tried had a bug that stopped it learning to identify spam at all. The latest version just crashes when I try to do anything with spam messages, and I couldn't find any intermediate versions of the software. It's quite possible that my data is corrupt. A shame, because Scribe is the only product that has the wit to keep suspected spam separate from confirmed spam (apart from Spamhilator). It's really quite tedious peering at a long list of spam checking for what's new.
Only Spamhilator allows you to properly convert spam to ham when it's been misclassified. The others let you flag it easily enough, but fail to move it from the junk folder back to your inbox. Very irritating.
What's other people's experience?