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Email Hacking and Such
So, first off, my overall goal is to get a way for my 770 to, every x minutes, automatically connect to the internet, pull email from my server, and then disconnect. First off, is there any easy way to do this that I've missed?
If the answer to that last question is no, my second question is if it is possible to tell the email application to start recieving email? It looks like there is a dbus facility to do it, but I'm pretty new to dbus, so I can't figure it out. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks. |
Re: Email Hacking and Such
I just set up the mail client -- (albiet on the 880) which will support POP mail, and then you can set a time interval for how often it will check for mail -- in this case from my google account. It took a little while, as I am still new to this, but it works fine....
Thor |
Re: Email Hacking and Such
It won't check if you're not connected though. At least, my 770 won't. What I"m looking for is a way to automatically, without any intervention on my part, connect, get my mail, and disconnect.
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Re: Email Hacking and Such
If you configure network manager to connect automatically, and include enough connections that they're always available, this becomes a fairly simple problem.
There's a connectivity wrapper shell script: run a program through that, and whenever it tries to open a socket, the OS will fire the network connection app. If you give it permission to automatically connect... Of course, you're going to need to write a custom mail-fetcher app: Telomer looks promising, however. |
Re: Email Hacking and Such
Agree with everything aleksandyr says.
Additional options:
Additionally, on the N800 there's a the lovely new alarm framework which can handle the scheduling and invocation. |
Re: Email Hacking and Such
So, I did indeed find a DBUS call for osso_email. I wrote a little script that does what I want it to do. Here it is for reference.
Code:
#! /bin/sh |
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