What is eMA?
kyuran
>As much as you desire to kept them all in PowerMail, I would strongly
>suggest that you consider the eMA archive solution. You do not need to
>own FileMaker, if you switch email client, eMA works with all the major
>clients, and is not dependent on your staying with any parti
Marlyse,
I agree, I said "you do not need to own FileMaker" - and I know that you
are familiar with eMA.
One business partner uses Eudora as his basic database. I have tried to
migrate him to FileMaker and eMA and he resists, despite the fact that
regular Eudora crashes are clearly related to d
actually he does not need filemaker - runtime version runs just dandy.
---marlyse
>As much as you desire to kept them all in PowerMail, I would strongly
>suggest that you consider the eMA archive solution. You do not need to
>own FileMaker, if you switch email client, eMA works with all the majo
understandable if you do not want to wade 2x through spam.
easiest solution then - make a backup every day and if you can a copy to
an external drive. then, like 1x a month, you just burn all important
data to a CDR. you anyhow should have means of backing up your computer,
you REALLY don't want
As much as you desire to kept them all in PowerMail, I would strongly
suggest that you consider the eMA archive solution. You do not need to
own FileMaker, if you switch email client, eMA works with all the major
clients, and is not dependent on your staying with any particular client.
eMA will ma
Well, a recent experience of upgrading Powermail when I lost a TON of
email convinced me that I need to have an archive account...
But, I don't want to forward everything.. I only want to forward emails
which are not junk mail (aka emails which have been moved into a folder).
One of the biggest
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