![]() ![]() Last evening I then logged off the computer as I do each evening. I clicked that link as well and it did fix that rule toggling (on, off, on, off) issue. That, if you recall, caused me some new issue you said was causing me a “rule problem” and so you gave me another link that would turn the counting of mailboxes back ON. So, now this is pretty interesting… Yesterday, I clicked on a link in another post about Apple Mail being slow to open and you, Michael, explained to me that link was to set some preference NOT to ask Mail to count mailboxes. But when it’s not running it does not show up in Activity Monitor so how would one find it in short order once it starts running to highlight it and then click to run the “Sample Process” routine? Can I just click on the “Uninstall Apple Mail Plugin” that I see in the SpamSieve pulldown? And then what, reinstall SpamSieve again? I always keep the installers so I have the most recent SpamSieve installer and several other older ones too.Īnd last, I’ve heard about this “Sample Process” technique in Activity Monitor but I don’t know how one could do that for Apple Mail when the concept is to try to monitor Apple Mail when it goes from not running to running. What do I need to do to just disconnect SpamSieve such that I can load Mail without it calling SpamSieve? And then see how fast Mail opens without SpamSieve present. Might this slow load have something to do with SpamSieve? I was reading a similar thread on this forum but was asked to go ahead and open a new one. I known it to be bigger on other Mac deployments so that is likely still an ok size. I recently looked at the size of the Mail folder and it is about 13 GBytes. My concern would be if this long load is indicating some bigger issue where my Apple Mail might crash one day soon. ![]() That, in and of itself, doesn’t bother me as once it loads it is usually on for a long time after that and it runs quite normally. Typically it takes about 15 seconds to open but sometimes it takes closer to 20 seconds. the affected subset who want to use Mail in combination with another client but don’t run both at once.Some time I would say in the past couple months, not obviously around say a macOS upgrade but I just can’t say for sure, I noticed that Apple Mail is taking a long time to load. However, if you understand the issue about disabled plug-ins and want to assume that responsibility for yourself, you can click this link to tell SpamSieve not to do this check (and therefore not to launch Mail).įor the initial Mojave support, safety was the top priority, but going forward I will be looking more at whether there ways to improve the experience for people who want to use multiple mail clients, i.e. As far as I can tell, there’s an unavoidable tradeoff here between maximum safety and launching Mail inappropriately. Unfortunately, a side effect of this protection is that if you are using SpamSieve with multiple mail clients, SpamSieve may launch Mail when you weren’t planning to use it. SpamSieve tries to do everything possible to protect you from this, and that’s why it launches Mail in order to make sure that the plug-in is enabled, and deactivates the rules and alerts you if it isn’t. If the SpamSieve plug-in is disabled, Mail can move good messages to the Spam mailbox without consulting SpamSieve. ![]() Additionally, there are a variety of cases where a previously enabled plug-in can be disabled even if neither you nor SpamSieve changed anything. However, if one wishes to use both, the constant need to close MailĪs you have probably read, Mojave changed the way Mail works such that plug-ins need to be manually enabled by the user. That’s all well and good if you only want to use Outlook. ![]()
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