[BlueOnyx:26494] Re: POP sent to IMAP sent

Meaulnes Legler @ MailList bluelist at waveweb.ch
Thu Sep 21 01:21:26 -05 2023


thank you all

okaaay, me old man will comply and use the /en vogue/ IMAP <sigh>

best regards

で⊃ Meaulnes Legler
Zurich, Switzerland
+41¦0 44 260-1660

On 19.09.23 06:14, Michael Stauber via Blueonyx wrote:
> Hi Meaulnes,
> 
>> I guess all of you guys use IMAP on all of your computers, so you don't have this problem... I was looking for a solution for fetching my Sent folder contents automatically from my office desktop computer to the remote Sent folder on the server.
> 
> Like Taco and Chris have already mentioned: This day and age IMAP is really the best choice if you want to use the same account on multiple devices AND have all emails (sent and received) accessible everywhere.
> 
> I was in the same boat many years ago and was still using POP3 on an important account. Eventually it really became too much of an hassle when using multiple devices for checking emails.
> 
> Here is what I did: In Thunderbird I disabled the account that was still using POP3 and excluded it from being checked. I also renamed it to "username at server.com (POP3)" to make it really obvious: That's one old one.
> 
> Then I recreated the account in Thunderbird (using the same server, username and password), but configured it to use IMAP instead.
> 
> That way I now had two configurations in the email client for the very same account: An active one using IMAP, and a disabled one that used to use POP3 before it got disabled and was now excluded from regular email checks.
> 
> Now there were a few recent messages (and replies of mine) that I wanted to be present on the server and accessible via IMAP. So in Thunderbird I selected those messages and copied them from the disabled POP3 account to the now active IMAP account. Which then uploaded the messages via IMAP to the server. Then I set up a sensible folder structure and sorted the messages into the right folders.
> 
> If there were still a message older than that which I needed? I still had the old POP3 account data in Thunderbird and could fetch 'em from there.
> 
> So it's really not too much hassle to switch from POP3 to IMAP in the email-client. To the contrary: That little discomfort during the switch is repaid tenfold from there on.
> 
> Also, when you do this: Email clients usually also allow you to configure how long they keep messages on the server before deleting them there, or what to do with messages after that expiry date. Especially with IMAP (which usually leaves emails on the server) you should set up some sensible expunging or archiving.
> 
> Depending on the accounts typical usage I leave emails on the server for a few days or so and then archive them into either an IMAP folder on the server, or a local folder on my PC.
> 




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