I can confirm such mails, too. Since few weeks I'm receiving a long-term subscibed newsletter with an empty FROM: field as long as the mail stays in new mail folder.
But as soon as my automatic filter has moved the read message to another mail folder, the FROM field will be shown correctly on next Pmail startup.
In raw format the "FROM:" field reads:
From: =?UTF-8?Q?GefahrgutOnline=5BSpringer_Fachmedien_M=C3=BCnchen=5D?=
gefahrgut@springer.com
But irrespective whether emojies should be used or not in email headers, other mail clients like Thunderbird can handle this without any problems. And this is the reason that more and more users leave Pmail and change its mail client. I see it in our company. Only the old-school users (like me) are still using Pmail while all younger colleagues prefer Thunderbird which is connected via IMAP to our Mercury I. At the moment we are at about 50% Pmail to Thunderbird users.
We can discuss the sense and nonsense of emojis and other weird stuff as much as we want. The Internet is just too fast for David and his support team to keep up to date and to implement all that weird stuff comes out every day. Unfortunately, we have to face this truth.
We ourselves, as computer nerds, can handle it and could live with. But the majority wants to have html mails, emojis, etc..
My own opinion: Unfortunately we are a dying user community. But fortunately Mercury works great and we are happy that David has launched v4.9 recently which will be tested soon. At the end it doesn't matter with us which user is using which mail client.
I can confirm such mails, too. Since few weeks I'm receiving a long-term subscibed newsletter with an empty FROM: field as long as the mail stays in new mail folder.
But as soon as my automatic filter has moved the read message to another mail folder, the FROM field will be shown correctly on next Pmail startup.
In raw format the "FROM:" field reads:
From: =?UTF-8?Q?GefahrgutOnline=5BSpringer_Fachmedien_M=C3=BCnchen=5D?=
gefahrgut@springer.com
But irrespective whether emojies should be used or not in email headers, other mail clients like Thunderbird can handle this without any problems. And this is the reason that more and more users leave Pmail and change its mail client. I see it in our company. Only the old-school users (like me) are still using Pmail while all younger colleagues prefer Thunderbird which is connected via IMAP to our Mercury I. At the moment we are at about 50% Pmail to Thunderbird users.
We can discuss the sense and nonsense of emojis and other weird stuff as much as we want. The Internet is just too fast for David and his support team to keep up to date and to implement all that weird stuff comes out every day. Unfortunately, we have to face this truth.
We ourselves, as computer nerds, can handle it and could live with. But the majority wants to have html mails, emojis, etc..
My own opinion: Unfortunately we are a dying user community. But fortunately Mercury works great and we are happy that David has launched v4.9 recently which will be tested soon. At the end it doesn't matter with us which user is using which mail client.