Now, here I have an important question: what is the difference between POP and
MAPI... Eudora gives me this choice...
Will love to know.
Many thanks
Marcio
-Original Message-
>From: tjpa
>Sent: Nov 1, 2009 12:13 AM
>To: COMPUTERGUYS-L@LISTSERV.AOL.COM
>Subject: Re: [CGUYS] online stor
I have mail boxes for e-mails that can be accessed very easily. I can enter a
name and Eudora will give me all e-mails that contain that name... I can use
filters that work and are easy to set. And so on...
Marcio
-Original Message-
>From: "Rev. Stewart Marshall"
>Sent: Oct 31, 2009 5:
I have tried Tbird... not the same.
Marcio
-Original Message-
>From: tjpa
>Sent: Oct 31, 2009 7:30 PM
>To: COMPUTERGUYS-L@LISTSERV.AOL.COM
>Subject: Re: [CGUYS] Eudora 8, Beta 7
>
>On Oct 31, 2009, at 5:00 PM, Rev. Stewart Marshall wrote:
>> The times I tried installing Tbird I could not
I have asked and I repeat... what is a better alternative today? Or at least
comparable?... And mind you I do use web mail too...
Marcio
-Original Message-
>From: Tony B
>Sent: Oct 31, 2009 3:56 PM
>To: COMPUTERGUYS-L@listserv.aol.com
>Subject: Re: [CGUYS] Eudora 8, Beta 7
>
>I was a hu
Try it... you still can download Eudora 7.
Marcio
-Original Message-
>From: tjpa
>Sent: Oct 31, 2009 3:39 PM
>To: COMPUTERGUYS-L@LISTSERV.AOL.COM
>Subject: Re: [CGUYS] Eudora 8, Beta 7
>
>On Oct 31, 2009, at 8:47 AM, Marcio wrote:
>> Yes, but web mail does what Eudora does?
>
>What is it
At 01:56 PM 10/31/2009 -0400, you wrote:
I was a huge Eudora fan in a different era. It did nothing but email,
but it did it very well, very intuitively. Certainly in the PC
software all time hall of fame. Remember, often the alternative was
Outlook.
What else do you want your email to do? I h
You are all convincing me to keep my Eudora 7
Marcio
-Original Message-
>From: tjpa
>Sent: Oct 31, 2009 3:09 PM
>To: COMPUTERGUYS-L@LISTSERV.AOL.COM
>Subject: Re: [CGUYS] Eudora 8, Beta 7
>
>On Oct 31, 2009, at 11:59 AM, mike wrote:
>> I don't keep anything on flash I don't fully expect
These kinds of things make me love Eudora more...
Marcio
-Original Message-
>From: Sue Cubic
>Sent: Oct 31, 2009 1:53 PM
>To: COMPUTERGUYS-L@LISTSERV.AOL.COM
>Subject: Re: [CGUYS] Eudora 8, Beta 7
>
>At 09:43 AM 10/31/2009 -0500, you wrote:
>>I sometimes end up in places and areas with n
What was the best part of Eudora Rev.?
Marcio
-Original Message-
>From: "Rev. Stewart Marshall"
>Sent: Oct 31, 2009 2:23 AM
>To: COMPUTERGUYS-L@LISTSERV.AOL.COM
>Subject: Re: [CGUYS] Eudora 8, Beta 7
>
>As far as I am concerned the best parts of Eudora they stripped out
>of it when it w
The last sandisk I got allowed me upon first connection to disable U3.
Stewart
At 09:12 PM 10/31/2009, you wrote:
This is surprisingly hard to do. I have had some success with a
utility from HP.
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Finally Tom gives us an answer.
This one of those things like not including cut/paste in the first couple
iPhone os's that makes users wonder what is going on. From forums on the web
this looks like moto dropped the ball on this one since the hardware as well
as android support multitouch. Multito
It will also be interesting when the next Verizon droid phone hits, the
Eris, if it will have multitouch since we know the device itself does and we
will find out if it is Verizon putting some weird controls in.
On Oct 31, 2009 7:15 PM, "mike" wrote:
Finally Tom gives us an answer.
This one of
On Oct 31, 2009, at 2:39 PM, John DeCarlo wrote:
Google U3 Removal. There are ways to get that space back.
This is surprisingly hard to do. I have had some success with a
utility from HP.
*
** List info, subscription
On Oct 31, 2009, at 3:09 PM, Rev. Stewart Marshall wrote:
I do have email on my phone (no more smartphone) but when I do a
local download at home, poof there goes those email messages, plus
the attachments and such are not available. (I get important
documents that way, plus info)
Stop us
On Oct 31, 2009, at 7:44 PM, Rev. Stewart Marshall wrote:
When I tried installing it, it did not allow itself to be installed
in a customer specified location or have attachments saved in a
customer specified location.
When using Windows I never install software in or alter the standard
lo
On Oct 31, 2009, at 3:04 PM, Rev. Stewart Marshall wrote:
We have mentioned the fact about the attachments.
What's wrong with the following (other than changing old habits)?
Q: Where are my Apple Mail attachments stored?
A: They are stored on the mail server and also cached on your computer
The truth appears in driblets...
"multitouch, which the Droid doesn't do"
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I'd stick with Eudora too then...if it isn't broke don't fix it. Now you
know you have an alternative if you need it.
On Oct 31, 2009 5:37 PM, "Rev. Stewart Marshall"
wrote:
Thank you for clarifying it, I might just try it again.
And yes it was one of the earlier ones.
I have a tendency not to
Thank you for clarifying it, I might just try it again.
And yes it was one of the earlier ones.
I have a tendency not to try it after a couple of times if my own
programs work and don't need to be fixed.
I am using WIN 7 and no problems with Eudora 7.
Stewart
At 07:14 PM 10/31/2009, you wr
Must have been a very early version or beta, I know very very few programs
that don't let themselves be installed where you want. As far as
attachments go, I also never used a version of tbird that didn't let me put
them wherever I wanted. Either way both these issues don't exist and
haven't for
Tom if they have changed it great.
When I tried installing it, it did not allow itself to be installed
in a customer specified location or have attachments saved in a
customer specified location.
I know you have a habit of gritching in situations like that and so do I.
Stewart
At 04:30 PM
On Oct 31, 2009, at 5:00 PM, Rev. Stewart Marshall wrote:
The times I tried installing Tbird I could not do that.
Not fair to blame TBird for that!
I have installed it many times for many clients on both Macs and
Windows. Never a problem.
**
On Oct 31, 2009, at 4:57 PM, Rev. Stewart Marshall wrote:
I do not trust their serves, I trust my servers better.'
Access it via any IMAP client and the files will reside in both places
-- twice as safe!
*
** List inf
If Eudora works for you that's great. I however do tire of the few who would
complain that Vista broke Eudora etc and not realize that sometimes ten year
old programs aren't going to keep working on new systems. If Eudora keeps
humming along good times.
On Oct 31, 2009 2:07 PM, "Rev. Stewart Marsh
The times I tried installing Tbird I could not do that.
Tbird manually installed itself into my documents and settings folder
and I would have to dig down deep to get at its contents.
I put Eudora into it's own folder on D: on my home setup or on C;\eudora.
No searching for it.
I will keep w
True but read your last sentence
Their servers.
I do not trust their serves, I trust my servers better.'
Call me Anal. Monk is my mentor.
Stewart
At 03:50 PM 10/31/2009, you wrote:
If you're arguing Eudora vs. Outlook I think you're preaching to the
choir. But none of these are good argume
It's not that you can install Eudora anywhere, you can do that with
Thunderbird, it is that you can move the install folder after its
installed. I manually moved the mbox files in tbird after a new install
from the old install, they just aren't in the same place as Eudora but in
the user data f
If you're arguing Eudora vs. Outlook I think you're preaching to the
choir. But none of these are good arguments against say, gmail via the
web interface.
*) No installation required
*) You can save attachments on all your machines, a year from now if you want
*) No need to keep track of mailfolde
OK two more.
Eudora allows you to install it wherever you want.
It also allows you to specify where you want attachments saved.
Plus each mailfolder, address book, filters etc. are saved in
separate files that are easily moved.
Stewart
At 02:27 PM 10/31/2009, you wrote:
Well Thunderbird
Well Thunderbird does everything you mention, so it isn't about what they
can do, just that some are very used to how Eudora does it.
On Oct 31, 2009 12:12 PM, "Rev. Stewart Marshall" <
revsamarsh...@earthlink.net> wrote:
Rules setting (for filters etc.) are very easy. Never changes always know
Does not always work.
Last one I got enabled me to turn it off. Did so.
Stewart
At 01:04 PM 10/31/2009, you wrote:
Can't format the whole drive?
On Oct 31, 2009 10:44 AM, "Jordan" wrote:
I'm new to flash drives.
The SanDisk flash I have loads a separate "volume" called U3 System which is
Depends on who you are and what you do.
Offline access is very important top me as my emails contain data for
work and home, and many of the auxiliaries I am involved
in. Important information.
I do have email on my phone (no more smartphone) but when I do a
local download at home, poof the
Rules setting (for filters etc.) are very easy. Never changes always
know where to find it. Rules are easily edited also.
We have mentioned the fact about the attachments.
It does not try and be your contact manager, your calendar keeper or
anything else, it is simply your email manager.
T
Neither does mine and I do a lot of what you are talking about.
My main computer is my desktop at home.
My work computer is my Dell laptop.
Both of them run Eudora and do the sorting I need.
The desktop at home only downloads when I want and I do it periodically.
Otherwise I read my email on
Google U3 Removal. There are ways to get that space back.
On Sat, Oct 31, 2009 at 1:39 PM, Jordan wrote:
> I'm new to flash drives.
> The SanDisk flash I have loads a separate "volume" called U3 System which
> is clearly meant for Windows users.
> Is there a way to get rid of this on the Mac?
>
Can't format the whole drive?
On Oct 31, 2009 10:44 AM, "Jordan" wrote:
I'm new to flash drives.
The SanDisk flash I have loads a separate "volume" called U3 System which is
clearly meant for Windows users.
Is there a way to get rid of this on the Mac?
Thanks
*
I think you're misunderstanding the concept. If you're the type of
person that needs to read email when offline, then simply enable local
saving. Nobody's forcing you to keep a single copy online.
But have you seen modern cell coverage maps of the country? What part
are you in that you can't get y
I was a huge Eudora fan in a different era. It did nothing but email,
but it did it very well, very intuitively. Certainly in the PC
software all time hall of fame. Remember, often the alternative was
Outlook.
On Sat, Oct 31, 2009 at 1:39 PM, tjpa wrote:
> What is it that only Eudora does that ke
On Oct 31, 2009, at 8:47 AM, Marcio wrote:
Yes, but web mail does what Eudora does?
What is it that only Eudora does that keeps its fans so devoted?
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** List info, subscription management, list rules, archives, privacy
I'm new to flash drives.
The SanDisk flash I have loads a separate "volume" called U3 System
which is clearly meant for Windows users.
Is there a way to get rid of this on the Mac?
Thanks
*
** List info, subscription man
On Oct 31, 2009, at 9:10 AM, Tony B wrote:
Now, when you start talking about specific services such as gmail,
it's almost a different subject, because it does some things Eudora
can't do easily - like store all your stuff in the cloud. OTOH, gmail
still won't detach and delete attachments.
This
On Oct 31, 2009, at 12:41 AM, Rev. Stewart Marshall wrote:
Webmail requires lots of up time and connectivity to read and then
save what is needed.
Eudora simply connects and then disconnects.
Maybe this is just a Mac thing, but my email client does not have to
be online when I'm reading and
On Oct 31, 2009, at 8:27 AM, Tony B wrote:
Right. The "correct" answer to everything in this whole thread is that
local email clients are yesterday's news.
OMG, sometimes Tony is right.
Well maybe just semi-right. I don't see the problem being the local
client, it is downloading the email. G
On Oct 31, 2009, at 11:59 AM, mike wrote:
I don't keep anything on flash I don't fully expect to lose.
OMG, sometimes Mike is right.
Although today's flash drives are less fragile than those of old, they
will from time to time lose all their contents. While all media will
eventually fail,
Either, both. I've had each happen multiple times.
On Oct 31, 2009 9:26 AM, "Sue Cubic" wrote:
At 08:59 AM 10/31/2009 -0700, you wrote: > > I don't keep anything on flash
I don't fully expect to ...
Define "lose". You fear the data disappearing, or you physically lose the
flash drive?
Sue
At 08:59 AM 10/31/2009 -0700, you wrote:
I don't keep anything on flash I don't fully expect to lose.
Define "lose". You fear the data disappearing, or you physically
lose the flash drive?
Sue
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I don't keep anything on flash I don't fully expect to lose.
On Oct 31, 2009 8:56 AM, "Sue Cubic" wrote:
At 09:43 AM 10/31/2009 -0500, you wrote: > > I sometimes end up in places
and areas with no Internet...
I use a flash drive and a little program called EZ Back it Up to back up
certain files
At 09:43 AM 10/31/2009 -0500, you wrote:
I sometimes end up in places and areas with no Internet connection
(HORRORS? Yes Virginia there are still places like that)
In that case I do not need the net because I have my email messages
and can look one up if I need to.
Cloud storage might be g
Then we have two different needs.
I need to look up email all the time for info, or directions or
attachments whatever.
So local attachments make sense to me.
Printing up all the stuff I would need well, that would just kill way
too many forests for me, and I throw away a lot of paper to beg
It's not about being bright. Why is it devolved to not likes/dislikes but
right and stupid. I don't need my email when I can't connect, ever..never in
fact. So it works perfectly for me. The few emails I want to keep for
whatever reason I forward to another cloud email so they are on two...the
th
I sometimes end up in places and areas with no Internet connection
(HORRORS? Yes Virginia there are still places like that)
In that case I do not need the net because I have my email messages
and can look one up if I need to.
Cloud storage might be good and secure (?) But it is dependent on
The basic concept is sending and receiving email. And yes, nowadays
AJAX browser clients can do that as well as any local client like
Eudora.
Now, when you start talking about specific services such as gmail,
it's almost a different subject, because it does some things Eudora
can't do easily - lik
Yes, but web mail does what Eudora does?
Marcio
-Original Message-
>From: mike
>Sent: Oct 31, 2009 12:12 AM
>To: COMPUTERGUYS-L@listserv.aol.com
>Subject: Re: [CGUYS] Eudora 8, Beta 7
>
>I used it for years, switched to Thunderbird and then Outlook and now
>because of crappy dsl I stick
Yes, but they do what Eudora does?...
Marcio
-Original Message-
>From: Tony B
>Sent: Oct 31, 2009 8:27 AM
>To: COMPUTERGUYS-L@listserv.aol.com
>Subject: Re: [CGUYS] Eudora 8, Beta 7
>
>Right. The "correct" answer to everything in this whole thread is that
>local email clients are yesterd
Right. The "correct" answer to everything in this whole thread is that
local email clients are yesterday's news. Well, for anyone with
broadband anyway. Once browsers became capable of running email as
quickly as any other local client, there suddenly weren't too many
good reasons not to do it that
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