From b8e2f057669b64cd2c12560085a36bdd490da709 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Cory Dransfeldt Date: Sat, 30 Sep 2023 15:26:52 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] fix: formatting --- ...andling-inbound-email-with-regex-filters-now-with-chatgpt.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/src/posts/2023/fastmail-handling-inbound-email-with-regex-filters-now-with-chatgpt.md b/src/posts/2023/fastmail-handling-inbound-email-with-regex-filters-now-with-chatgpt.md index d1a6d615..e591b638 100644 --- a/src/posts/2023/fastmail-handling-inbound-email-with-regex-filters-now-with-chatgpt.md +++ b/src/posts/2023/fastmail-handling-inbound-email-with-regex-filters-now-with-chatgpt.md @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ I've been using Fastmail for years now and have explored a number of different a For now, I've approached filtering my mail by applying regular expressions to reasonably broad categories of incoming mail[^2]. My thinking with this approach is that will scale better over the long term by applying heuristics to common phrases and patterns in incoming mail without the need to apply rules to senders on a per address or domain basis. -{% image '', 'A diagram of my Fastmail workflow', 'w-full', '600px', 'eager' %} +{% image 'https://cdn.coryd.dev/blog/fastmail-workflow.jpg', 'A diagram of my Fastmail workflow', 'w-full', '600px', 'eager' %} ## Alias-specific rules