On Sunday 30 November 2008 19:16:50 Ingo Klöcker wrote: > I think you are reading too much in what KMail can do. There's no magic > behind this feature. KMail simply looks for the words "attached" > and "attachment" (or whatever words KMail is asked to look for in its > configuration) in the message you are about to send and, in case one of > those words is found, checks whether there's an attachment. > > KMail's ability has (almost) nothing to do with natural language > understanding which is what your idea has at its core. > > What you propose sounds like a very interesting research topic. KDE > Research (http://techbase.kde.org/Research) might be the right address > for this. They might have some ideas how to find a young researcher in > the field of Natural Language Processing who might be interested in > writing his thesis about this. For those interested, have a look at Apple Mail. It has "data detectors", e.g. for extracting ical events (appointments) from natural text. I haven't tried it myself, but I've been told it works quite well. Frank _______________________________________________ KDE PIM mailing list kde-pim@kde.org https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde-pim KDE PIM home page at http://pim.kde.org/