My officemate and I had similar problems when we switched to Outlook. I do not know what version our IMAP server is running, but the problem seemed to go away once we bumped the timeout up to 3 to 4 minutes.
Timm Gleason Hardware Engineer N2H2, Inc -----Original Message----- From: David Gaudine [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, February 26, 1998 8:27 AM To: Dale Harrison Cc: debian-user@lists.debian.org Subject: Re: IMAP4-4.1 Broken On Wed, 25 Feb 1998, Dale Harrison wrote: > Can someone else out there in Debianland confirm this? > > IMAP4-4.1 won't delete messages. It might be a new feature or something, but > as there was no dox with it, it's hard to tell. > > I downgraded to IMAP4-4 and everything's hunky dory. IMAP4-4.1 gave me trouble too. However, since I started having problems with IMAP, POP3, and smail simultaneously, I assumed the problem was with smail, and didn't bother downgrading IMAP4. After reading your message I did, and my problems are gone. Outlook Express gives a warning that I need an IMAP 4 rev 1 server, but works fine. Using IMAP4-4.1, my symptoms are different from yours. When I run Outlook Express, it downloads the message headers, and then immediately says "your server has unexpectedly terminated the connection". If I use the arrow keys fast enough so that the server is kept busy sending the message bodies, the connection does not get terminated, until it's no longer busy, at which point it is immediately terminated. From then on, I cannot download additional message bodies or delete messages because I'm not connected to the server; actually I can download a message by clicking on its header and then selecting file/connect, which downloads the message and then gives the "unexpectedly terminated" message again. Further on the subject of IMAP4, I'm not sure of the best way to access messages on both the host and the PC. What I do now is, since accessing my mail from the PC causes the messages to be transferred from /var/spool/mail/david to ~david/mbox, I set up procmail to send all unfiltered mail to that file, and set up pine to use that file as its default inbox. This seems to work great, but I only set it up yesterday. One minor annoyance; if I read a message on one system it's still unread on the other. -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .