BlueMail is a free, beautifully designed, cross platform email & calendar app, capable of managing an unlimited number of mail accounts from various providers. It is the perfect replacement for your stock email app.
I've created an email and I want the text to remain in a white colour but whenever I highlight the words and turn them into a hyper link, the formatting changes and the text colour changes to blue but I want it to remain white.
if you need the text it to stay white, try using an !important declaration to override any other styling. Text-decoration will keep it from being underlined, but color is a different property. And remember, most email clients like Gmail, Yahoo, etc. prefer seeing in-line CSS... It's painstaking, but it will help ensure your emails look the same across a variety of clients.
If that's the case, that blue means "unread" or maybe "unopened", (depending on your settings), then the developers must be thinking most users are occassional email users, who not only keep the accounts folded up (or not expanded or not dropped down), so that only the account name is showing, but who maybe don't even open the program every day.
Because for people who have a lot of folders, well, at least it makes sense to me to keep them all expanded, so I can see which folders have new messages. I don't need the blue color to know that there are unopened messages, because I can clearly see them in the list. And it doesn't make sense to keep them folded up, because I would have to unfold and refold them many times per day. I will be opening Thunderbird once per day, and keeping it open and checking it frequently, all day long.
3 of my folders are mailing lists, which sometimes receive 20 messages daily, and sometimes more. I can't think of anyone who subscribes to a mailing list, who probably reads every single message that comes through the list. Of course there are always going to be unread messages....again, unless you are just an occassional user of email.
Although on 2nd thought, eventually all my accounts will be showing blue, all the time. So when that happens, it probably won't matter anymore. As long as the folders still go blue, or give some kind of indication about new mail.
All current faculty, staff, and students receive a BLUE account with two email addresses automatically assigned to them; while they are active members of the University Community. For faculty and staff this generally means while they are either under contract or currently employed according to HR. For students, this means from when you have been accepted until 1 year after your last enrolled course.
Each individual has two email addresses automatically assigned to them. These addresses point to the same mailbox so you do not need to go to multiple mailboxes to review your messages. (YourFirstN...@creighton.edu and Your...@creighton.edu)
After activating your Blue account, CU email can be access by using either the Cloud Version or Desktop Versions of Outlook. To access your email via the web, go to: (Links to an external site.) Log in with your Ne...@creighton.edu and your BLUE password.
You can also remotely access you email by going to the Creighton homepage Click the Full Menu (upper right). Select Office365 under Resources. From there you will have access to your email plus the other features of Office 365.
3. In a panic as my phone and email kept blowing up, I called Joe Tierney at Umzuzu (they are the best Google Apps guys around and helped us get set it up for Blue Gurus). He helped me get my password reset on my Google Apps account and shared a post from their blog on what steps I should take: I Think My Gmail Was Hacked? At the same time, his fellow Umzuzu-ite Tony Sheets helped recover all of my contacts and handled some other technical items behind the scenes.
Whew! What a day! It started out with sorrow in my heart, picked up as I played golf with friends, then went crazy when my email was hacked, and ended up with us handling the situation (THROUGH EXCELLENT TEAMWORK) about as well as we possibly could.
The emails reported to Whittaker had been sent to journalists, and guessed that Twitter would be charging $20 a month for a blue-badge privilege. (The crooks actually went for $19.99, presumably because round numbers are surpisingly uncommon as prices in the English speaking world, with that one-cent reduction apparently making a $1000 ripoff look like a bargain when it turns up for just $999.99.)
The blue tick that shows someone's account is verified is coveted by many of us mere mortals. Those badges of honor do serve some practical purposes if you are communicating with people you want to give a good impression. While getting verified on the likes of Twitter and Instagram is rather difficult, having a blue badge next to all the emails you send out is much easier to get and something you can actually do yourself. The good news for us is that technologist Joseph Thio is back once again to walk us through exactly how we can get one for ourselves.
The video starts with Thio talking about email certificates, as these are key to the verification process. Thankfully for us, there is a handy site that gives these certificates out for free after you fill out a simple form. Next, we are shown in detail the steps involved for installing these certificates on many of the popular email clients like Outlook Express and Apple Mail. Thio is always really meticulous in his explanations which is what I like about his videos. If you follow along to the letter, you shouldn't have any issues in getting all your emails verified.
While some of you may think having a verified tick next to your email address is somewhat of a gimmick, it could actually be the difference between an email you send out to a prospective client or customer being opened or not. I know such a thing would pique my interest in the sea of emails that I receive daily. I could also see a blue tick really helping when it comes to reaching out to people responsible for locations you want to shoot at or models you want to work with. While we'd all prefer the collection of pixels that form these blue ticks were irrelevant, it really could make a difference to you as a photographer.
I upgraded to Ubuntu 18.04. One problem is that I no longer get that blue envelope over by the top right corner when an email comes in Thunderbird. I just get a notification for a few seconds in the middle top of the screen and if you're not in front of the pc you can potentially miss important emails as soon as they come in. This was a great feature before, any why i can get this back again. Any help is much appreciated. Thanks.
when you click on the link, if you have a stand alone mail client setup, (Not browser based, a la yahoo, gmail, hotmail, etc.) it will generate a new email window. Do you have Outlook or Thunderbird or some other mail program?
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