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Julien

Belgium
30 Posts |
Posted - Jul 16 2009 : 01:49:49
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Hi,
First, I must apologize because I still haven't do the debugging job that you have asked to me. (Ref: http://www.xequte.com/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=2813)
I forgot to add something in the newsletter. I decided to stop the sending :

(1 sending per recipient, 5s delay between each sending with a maximum of 250 sendings per hour (w/ a delay between each 250 sendings limit)
If I click on "Cancel" I got a confirmation window :

I expected that clicking on "Yes" would stop the sending to all recipient (I mean a definitive stop)...
Not at all, it returned to the previous state (as in picture 1) ! And all buttons that are in the window behind are untouchable !! (abort sending, pause sending...)
My last option is to kill MLK in the Task Manager.
Please advise.
Design for the preview pane of email applications. That means you've got about 500, 600 pixels tops for your email designs. If you think recipients will actually double click an email to view your message in full screen "to appreciate all its glory," send us whatever you're smokin. |
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Julien

Belgium
30 Posts |
Posted - Jul 16 2009 : 01:54:05
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Suggestion: it would be awesome if MLK would remember the position of its windows.
e.g. I often have to move out the "Sending delay" window to see what's happening behind it but MLK keeps putting it back to the center of the screen and it's really annoying when you have to copy something from the screen to a piece of paper...
Design for the preview pane of email applications. That means you've got about 500, 600 pixels tops for your email designs. If you think recipients will actually double click an email to view your message in full screen "to appreciate all its glory," send us whatever you're smokin. |
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xequte
    
7504 Posts |
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philmills

31 Posts |
Posted - Nov 25 2009 : 02:41:08
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I haven't checked in 7.30 yet, but even better would be if all the sending process happened within 1 window. Overall send process in upper part, individual message send process in lower part. No pop-ups at all. |
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Julien

Belgium
30 Posts |
Posted - Nov 25 2009 : 03:02:59
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I agree. Something like that would be sexy.
Design for the preview pane of email applications. That means you've got about 500, 600 pixels tops for your email designs. If you think recipients will actually double click an email to view your message in full screen "to appreciate all its glory," send us whatever you're smokin. |
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xequte
    
7504 Posts |
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philmills

31 Posts |
Posted - Jan 24 2011 : 01:15:16
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bump |
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xequte
    
7504 Posts |
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