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.

At first I thought it was a no brainer: red. 'The best defence is a good offence'. But then I thought that there are many enemies in the game that only require one hit to kill, and perhaps there is a sword upgrade still to come that will make most enemies dispatch-able in a single blow (this is still my first play through), and that by the endgame I would have effectively 40 hearts if I picked blue.


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So, I'm rocking blue at the moment. I think I should have to work out how to hit bosses and do it twice as many times so that I'm actually fully digesting the boss design and giving them each some longevity. Blue just lets me mess up a bit more.

You can carry a fairy AND the secret medicine for two revives if you really need them. There's no need for the blue tunic. The red tunic however basically gives you the Seashell Sword very early without the hassle of getting enough shells. (And they made more shells needed for it in the remake unfortunately)

There are times when Blue is probably more valuable. On Hero Mode, obviously it balances the scales a bit more to take the defense boost. The other thing I could think of would be if you were trying to beat the game without dying (which DID do something in the original and I assume there's something in the remake too, though I haven't confirmed it). Probably better to take blue for the peace of mind in a run like that.

Considering that Link's Awakening is my favorite Zelda game and I know it inside and out, before the third dungeon, I grabbed the red mail. It just made me get through the game with a huge smile on my face watching my favorite game get a huge graphical overhaul.

Had the same problem and just realized a solution - you have to generate an APP-SPECIFIC password. This is extremely easy - go to your icloud account home page and look under "security" - right hand column, near your trusted devices and phone numbers. Click "Generate Password" under App-specific passwords - it'll give you a sixteen digit code, with a hyphen after each set of four digits (so 3 hyphens total). Go to BlueMail, type in your Apple ID, and then type in that app-specific 16 digit password (actually 19 digits including the hyphens) and that will get you into Blue mail. Easy peasy.

I deal with lots of small packages and old normal USPS blue boxes were great for dropping packages off. But now I have to go to post office every time I want to drop off one tiny package which is very inconvenient.

I'm not sure what I want to ask, it's more of releasing my frustration than asking anything. I understand they've changed blue box because of theft but how stupid you must be to come up with blue boxes for letters only....it's not pre-email era, is it?

I admit I do not have the link directly to the regulation, but the blue drop off boxes were always meant for letters only. The regs said that if you left a package in them the carrier could simply ignore it or send it back. All that they are doing now is making an issue out of it by preventing you from doing what you should not have been doing in the first place.

I admit I do not have the link directly to the regulation, but the blue drop off boxes were always meant for letters only. The regs said that if you left a package in them the carrier could simply ignore it...

There has never been any regulation about not putting packages in the blue boxes. If that was true, then why do they all have a sticker announcing that the weight limit is 13 ounces for pieces with postage paid in stamps? And no stated weight limit for pieces with online labels?

Regarding those restrictions blocking packages carrying "only stamps" for postage, it's because those bearing labels that were printed on-line will have you in the system as a "known sender," who used a specific account and payment method that can be traced back to you later if necessary. An anonymous package bearing only stamps could conceivably have been mailed by anyone.

Your selective quote of the linked page omits the key tidbit: under "Allowed" it mentions "Domestic mail (including Priority Mail Express) with metered postage or PC Postage". Postage printed through eBay, PayPal, stamps.com etc. are "PC postage" and thus allowed regardless of weight.

Your information will be used to provide yourequested products, services, or information. Collectionis authorized by 39 USC 401, 403, & 404. Providingthe information is voluntary, but if not provided, wemay not process your transaction. We do not discloseyour information to third parties without your consent,except to facilitate the transaction, to act on yourbehalf or request, or as legally required. This includesthe following limited circumstances: to a congressionaloffice on your behalf; to financial entities regardingfinancial transaction issues; to a USPS auditor; toentities, including law enforcement, as required by lawor in legal proceedings; to domestic and internationalcustoms relating to outgoing international mail pursuantto federal law and agreements; and to contractors andother entities aiding us to fulfil the service (serviceproviders).


What is BlueMail?

BlueMail by Planned Parenthood of Northern New England is a program where your birth control medications and supplies are mailed to you. Hands down, it's the simplest way to ensure you are ready for whatever life throws at you.

When will my supplies be mailed?

BlueMail will send you a 3 month supply of your birth control every 10 weeks (8 weeks for patients using pills on a continuous cycle) until your prescription has expired. The Depo Shot (used subcutaneously) will be sent every 10 weeks. A note will be included in each shipment to let you know when to expect your next shipment.

End of last week reports emerged, that the 5-star rated Android mail client BlueMail is leaking credentials. The app submits username and passwords to their own servers. The story was featured in the German IT-news portal Golem and German newspaper Sddeutsche Zeitung. Originally the malicous behaviour has been uncovered by Mike Kuketz.

The story caught my attention, because I have been using the feature rich mail client for over a year. I immediatelly reacted to this security breach with changing passwords and replacing the app. To warn other users I corrected my 5 star rating to a 1 star rating by stating the leak.

Blue Mail is sending email creditals to its own servers. Period. No discussion. You have a security breach. The mail account is compromised. Mike Kuketz is right. The reports are true. You must change passwords. You must uninstall Blue Mail. You must find another mail client.

He is right. On numerous occasions as soon as I add Bluemail someone begins to change what I write in my emails as i write them. There is something within Bluemail that is not secure and I have to change all my email passwords on other accounts as a result. This happened once 3 years ago. I tried to use it again last year and had the same issue. I would definitely advise anyone to steer clear of Bluemail.

On further examination your probably correct. Blue mail is not really an email client and is misleading users. It is a cloud service and the app is the portal to their service not a true email client.

Swipe to select was removed to make space for more useful actions in the future, like for example swipe to delete. You can still quickly select emails by tapping the contact picture. Once one email is selected, additional ones can be selected with a short tap anywhere.

Hi. I just found BlueMail in flathub (I already used this app on Android for quite some time). I am unable to add my Gmail account to it (my university Microsoft account went just fine). When I try the automatic option, it open my browser, I grant the required permissions and click continue. Then, nothing else happens. The app stays in the waiting phase. I suspected a permission issue but in flatseal I am not sure what to try. I tried a manual configuration but it failed too. No progress with the rpm version, so I stick with flatpak. I found several other issues with the app but this one is the only critical. I even checked my Google settings and BlueMail shows (at least for the Android flavor). Any ideas?

Thanks. Yes, I know BlueMail is propietary and I intend to contact support. But so is Mailspring and other email apps I have tried on Linux and never found an issue like this. Since I am running Silverblue, I though there was a better chance to find assistance in the forum.

Although I use the app K-9 Mail, there will be something similar on your mailapp.

When I go to the settings, I find a folder Miscellaneous and in this folder I can see where the attachments are placed.

I'm dumbstruck right now. All mail clients that use Activesync are quarantined and have to be approved by our helpdesk. Yet, we came across some mail clients that were still able to bypass this on mobile phones and the most notable one was BlueMail. After some research, you learn that it uses EWS so I enabled the EWS Block list org wide and added BlueMail* as value. But mail keeps on flowing.

I installed Bluemail a few days ago through snap. It works like a charm except for one thing : whenever I try to save an attached document to an email I have received, the window that pops up (which is supposed to allow me to chose where the file should be saved) is unreadable : all the letters it contains in the folder names are replaced by small square symbols, making it impossible for me to navigate through my folders. e24fc04721

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