05-08-2008, 09:51 PM
[quote M A V I C]
[quote Chupa Chupa]No. Of the features I mentioned those are two that I really like (quick look and email to iCal) two (spaces and stacks) that I don't care for. I didn't intend for a few sentences to be an all inclusive feature review. As said, overall it's worth the $100 entry fee.
The "email to iCal" thing has been around for a long, long time.
All I can say is it's new to me. I've been using Mail since it first came out and I don't recall being able to click on an address or date and have it go to iCal or Address book in previous versions of OS X.
Apple also advertises it as a "new feature." From Apple's Leopard page:
Data, detected.
Say you get an email invitation to dinner. What if Mail recognized the address of the restaurant and let you map directions on the web? Or let you click once to add the date to your iCal calendar? With Leopard, it does. Mail even recognizes relative dates (“let’s meet next Tuesday”) and keywords (“dinner tomorrow”), so you can act on information rather than enter it.
http://www.apple.com/macosx/features/mail.html
[quote Chupa Chupa]No. Of the features I mentioned those are two that I really like (quick look and email to iCal) two (spaces and stacks) that I don't care for. I didn't intend for a few sentences to be an all inclusive feature review. As said, overall it's worth the $100 entry fee.
The "email to iCal" thing has been around for a long, long time.
All I can say is it's new to me. I've been using Mail since it first came out and I don't recall being able to click on an address or date and have it go to iCal or Address book in previous versions of OS X.
Apple also advertises it as a "new feature." From Apple's Leopard page:
Data, detected.
Say you get an email invitation to dinner. What if Mail recognized the address of the restaurant and let you map directions on the web? Or let you click once to add the date to your iCal calendar? With Leopard, it does. Mail even recognizes relative dates (“let’s meet next Tuesday”) and keywords (“dinner tomorrow”), so you can act on information rather than enter it.
http://www.apple.com/macosx/features/mail.html