An interesting bug in PowerMail 5.1. Summary: PowerMail puts inaccurate timestamp in outgoing mail if you change the time zone while it is running.
Details: If you open the Date and Time panel of System Preferences while PowerMail is running, and change your time zone, PowerMail will put a date stamp in your mail that has the _local_ time of the first time zone but the _time zone offset_ of the time in the second time zone, resulting in an inaccurate time stamp for the outgoing mail. An example of the headers, excerpted from a mail I sent to myself, follows. I set Time and Date to a New York location, launched PowerMail, then changed the location to San Francisco, and composed and sent the email: >Received: from [67.123.90.148] (port=50255 helo=[67.123.90.148]) > by jag.opensourcehost.com with esmtpa (Exim 4.43) > id 1D6FVQ-0002Ba-IK > for <<me>>; Tue, 01 Mar 2005 16:06:16 -0600 >From: "Alan Harper" <<me>> >To: "Alan Harper" <<me>> >Subject: Test Changed >Date: Tue, 1 Mar 2005 17:05:57 -0800 >Message-Id: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> >X-Mailer: CTM PowerMail version 5.1 build 4340 English > <http://www.ctmdev.com> Note that the mail says that it was sent at 01:05:57 2 Mar 2005 GMT but was received at 22:06:16 1 March 2005 GMT by the next relay. The three hour difference reflects the bug in PowerMail. The mail was really sent at 1 Mar 2005 17:05:57 -0500 (San Francisco time). A