It is not moderated, but I don't think your post was inappropriate.
>I am using Yarn, yarn dialer, and vsoup. my os is os2
>I am also using a dos program called Potato. Potato is a
>support program for anonymous remailers.
>If I am using it correctly, you shouldn't be able to tell
>where this message is originated from.
>
>In the documentation for Yarn, I have read about a pipe
>message to program function.
>
>What I would like is to be able to use Yarn to read the
>mail, and compose any replies, then pipe those replies to
>potato to anonymize them. But I don't think I can do that
>as the command line options for potato do not include the
>name of the file that the message text is in. otherwise I
>could use the %f from yarns pipe function.
>
>If there are any members of the list that use both Yarn, and
>potato, I would like to hear any ways you use them
>together.
>
>My interest is mainly being able to easily send replies and
>posts to lists and newsgroups using potato.
>
>Any slick ways of doing this other than saving a message to
>a file and using potato the normal way?
What is the normal way? The potatoes.doc excerpt below doesn't
seem to allow you to tell it the file name? Anything you could
do by saving a file and then using potato, you should be able to
figure out a way to do with the pipe command, or maybe even with
yes/yep.
>Also any way to configure potato to put the outgoing
>message in yarns outgoing packet? I am currently stuck with
>using my browser to send potatoes mail, I would rather use
>vsoup for this as well as my regular outgoing mail.
This might be a little difficult. May I ask what potato usually does
with the outgoing message it generates?
>finally, I know of at least one program that can do what
>both yarn and potato do, that is read, post, reply and
>anonymize, but I want to keep using Yarn. I spent nearly a
>week getting yarn and vsoup configured right, and I don't
>want to scrap all that, besides, I like yarn.
>
>
>
>from Yarn doc:
>Run a program, piping the article into the program's standard input.
> If you put %f on the command line, it is replaced with the name of a
> temporary file containing the article, and the article will not be
> piped into the standard input.
>
>
>from potatoes docs:
> Potato's command line usage is as follows:
> Usage: pot.exe [-z"passphrase"] [-diag] [-p inipath] [file.bk]
>
> where file.bk is a saved potato book (the bk extension may be omitted)
> and inipath is the directory containing pot.ini and other accessory
> files.
>
> The passphrase, if specified, is used to access a secured ini file, or
> may also specify a default passphrase for signing.