overclock351 to Linux · 4 years agoA decent alternative to thunderbird?message-squaremessage-square23fedilinkarrow-up129arrow-down10file-text
arrow-up129arrow-down1message-squareA decent alternative to thunderbird?overclock351 to Linux · 4 years agomessage-square23fedilinkfile-text
minus-squareEpheralinkfedilinkarrow-up2·4 years agoFor FOSS and from the terminal, ‘mutt’ is the go-to, as far as I’m aware.
minus-squareoverclock351OPlinkfedilinkarrow-up1·4 years agoMy only concern with mutt is that AFAIK it stores passwords in clear. any way to get around that?
minus-squaredm9pZCAqlinkfedilinkarrow-up3·4 years agoyou can use pass password manager source "echo 'set my_pass = `pass -- mail/you@mail.com`' |"
minus-squareCjkOvPDwQw@lemmygrad.mllinkfedilinkarrow-up2·4 years agoThanks for sharing , I was only using pass for neomutt. Removed that dependency now !
minus-squarekevincoxlinkfedilinkarrow-up1·4 years agoNot really. The client needs to send your password to the server to login. The alternatives are using a keyring to store the passwords or asking for the password each time. Really just use full disk encryption and it isn’t a serious issue.
For FOSS and from the terminal, ‘mutt’ is the go-to, as far as I’m aware.
My only concern with mutt is that AFAIK it stores passwords in clear. any way to get around that?
you can use
pass
password managerdeleted by creator
Thanks for sharing , I was only using pass for neomutt. Removed that dependency now !
Not really. The client needs to send your password to the server to login. The alternatives are using a keyring to store the passwords or asking for the password each time. Really just use full disk encryption and it isn’t a serious issue.
deleted by creator