Mail Clients
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They all work pretty much the same, so you might as well choose based on which user interface you prefer.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
Sure. I have yet to have a look at Thunderbird's UI. Will check it out once I get home.
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I have like 3 to 4 email addresses (I know it's low compared to the numbers you guys have!) and thought about using a mail client to synchronize all of them at once. Here's what I want to do: Combine all of the email addresses together into a single mail account in the Mail client and get them delivered to my desktop. I know it's probably a simple thing to do but I'm a total newbie in these things so I would appreciate it if you guys could suggest a good piece of Mail software. Currently I'm annoyed by the "Outlook Express needs to synchronize or whatever" message that pops up everytime I boot up Windows(I don't think I have it installed in the first place!) and I'm looking at Mozilla Thunderbird. What do you recommend?
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
I use Outlook - it can happily handle POP3 and IMAP mail accounts simultaneously, and picks up my mail from several accounts automatically. Works for me!
Real men don't use instructions. They are only the manufacturers opinion on how to put the thing together. Manfred R. Bihy: "Looks as if OP is learning resistant."
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All work well, but I guess the major players here are thunderbird and outlook...
[www.tamelectromecanica.com] Robots, CNC and PLC machines for grinding and polishing.
Windows Live Mail also looks nice after they replaced it with Outlook Express for OSes above Win XP.
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
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A second vote for Outlook 2010. I run the 64 bit version of Office 2010, and I have been told that Outlook 64 will handle up to 50 Gig PST files (although mine isn't that big yet!) If you're like me, and want to keep masses of emails, that's pretty good. I got bored with continual archiving, and the consequent delays when searching for an old item.
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Its un-limited. Thats great.. Will try today ..
// ♫ 99 little bugs in the code, // 99 bugs in the code // We fix a bug, compile it again // 101 little bugs in the code ♫
modified on Friday, May 13, 2011 4:23 AM
Ravi Sant wrote:
gr8
Not in the Lounge, please.
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I have like 3 to 4 email addresses (I know it's low compared to the numbers you guys have!) and thought about using a mail client to synchronize all of them at once. Here's what I want to do: Combine all of the email addresses together into a single mail account in the Mail client and get them delivered to my desktop. I know it's probably a simple thing to do but I'm a total newbie in these things so I would appreciate it if you guys could suggest a good piece of Mail software. Currently I'm annoyed by the "Outlook Express needs to synchronize or whatever" message that pops up everytime I boot up Windows(I don't think I have it installed in the first place!) and I'm looking at Mozilla Thunderbird. What do you recommend?
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
any mail client should be capable to receive messages from different servers - so where is the effort on synchronizing all on one account? And you probable want to answer with the same address the mail was received on - so you need connection to the server anyway. Stick with your favourite mail client and configure it right. If you want more comfort - get a webspace with pop3 and set up your own email addresses. regards Torsten
I never finish anyth...
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Ravi Sant wrote:
gr8
Not in the Lounge, please.
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updated..
// ♫ 99 little bugs in the code, // 99 bugs in the code // We fix a bug, compile it again // 101 little bugs in the code ♫
Thanks. :)
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Thanks for the information. But darn..I always thought a single account on a client could handle multiple email addresses. Ah well.... :(
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
Depending on the client you can have all your pop accounts download into a single folder, and pick which one you want to reply with when writing the message. I've done both with OE, the latter with Outlook as well (was down to a single pop account so never needed to try the former).
3x12=36 2x12=24 1x12=12 0x12=18
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Thanks for the information. But darn..I always thought a single account on a client could handle multiple email addresses. Ah well.... :(
My Blog My Achievements: * Posted 25,000th message in GIT O_O * Official supporter of the "thatraja's GIT Meet Sponsor Foundation" :D What you do, when you don't know what to do is what you do when you don't want to do what you do.
Nithin Sundar wrote:
I always thought a single account on a client could handle multiple email addresses.
Thunderbird allows you to direct mail read, filtered and sent from any account to any folder, so you can effectively mimic this. /ravi
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