其他的選項應該只會用到 -g (train as ham) 與 -s (train as spam),可以放到 mutt 的 .muttrc 裡面方便自己 train,有興趣的人可以玩看看:
macro index X "<pipe-entry>sb_filter.py -s > /dev/null\n<delete-message>" "mark as spam"
macro pager X "<pipe-entry>sb_filter.py -s > /dev/null\n<delete-message>" "mark as spam"
macro index Z "<pipe-entry>sb_filter.py -g > /dev/null\n" "mark as innocent"
macro pager Z "<pipe-entry>sb_filter.py -g > /dev/null\n" "mark as innocent"
PuTTY now supports IPv6, xterm 256-color control sequences, wildcards and recursive file transfer in PSFTP, and keepalives in all operating systems. A number of small bugs were fixed, security was improved for SSH2, and port forwarding can now be reconfigured mid-session.
Anyway she is going to use podcasting to promote her new movie House of Wax and will begin podcast her promotions, parties and more beginning April 29th.
It’s joining Webshots. Now, don’t know about Webshots? I didn’t either until recently. But Webshots has 23 million members (Flickr has less than a million). and they get 750,000 uploads a day. More uploads in five days than Flickr has had in all of its existence. And HeyPix’s team is going to add on some killer new technology to Webshots, James tells me. (He showed me his app at a geek dinner earlier in the year and we’ve kept in touch since then).
As for why Flickr is growing so much faster than any other photo sharing service on the Web, I’m not the most qualified person to answer that… but I’m fairly sure it goes back to something I wrote a couple of weeks ago:
Open API Web services + open data repositories = Web ecosystems
Flickr is an ecosystem. Is Webshots? Is Ofoto? Is Shutterfly?