On Tue, 9 Jun 1998, Glenn Alperin wrote: > Of course, there are many mail programs which do not seem to identify anything > at all about themselves. For example, I have yet to see any sort of > mailer identification from any person sending me e-mail from any of the > various supported mailer programs on our OpenVMS computer at Drew except > for Pine. Neither All-In-1 nor VMSmail nor PMDF Mail seem to leave any > sort of tag as to the mailer which is being used. Many mailers leave their mark in the message id. Yours is <B136ZXKOHX2JH*/R=DANIEL/R=A1/U=GALPERIN/@MHS> which though I do not know how to read it, I'm sure tells a great deal about what mailer you are using. There are also lines such as: Importance: normal Priority: normal UA-content-id: B136ZXKOHX2JH A1-type: MAIL Though they may be relatively common, this particular combination is almost certianly unique to your mailer especialy if you include the message-id. A lot of tracks are left, though it is always easiest to look at the X-Mailer line if avalable... Jason Rasku -- Jason Rasku, Box 270, Rossland, B.C., V0G 1Y0, (250) 362-5701, LinuxBox: (250) 362-9668. Web pages of Interest: Madness: <http://www.madnation.org/> <http://www.efn.org/~dendron> <http://www.peoplewho.org/Madness> Fibre: <http://kootweb.com/trillium/trrasku/trrasku.html> Spirituality: <mailto:[log in to unmask] sprits firstname lastname> ICQ 6375239 Insufficient facts always invite danger. -- Spock, "Space Seed", stardate 3141.9