On 2009-12-29, Papp Tamas (tompos@martos.bme.hu) wrote:
The protocoll imap is not the same as using pop3+leave messages on server.
That is correct. The POP protocol is designed to delete the messages from the server once they have been POPPED. The IMAP protocol is designed to leave the messages on the server all the time.
He wants to use this scenario anyway as he did for many years with no problems.
The fact that he has had 'no problems' in many years is purely the luck of the draw. One minor bug in either the IMAP/POP server or the mail client during an upgrade or other maintenance, and boom - he will *really* be surprised when *all* of his messages from the last few *years* are downloaded again, not just the last few hours worth.
One real worl example of how this can happen: his Outlook profile gets corrupted, and he still has all of his mail, but he has to recreate his account settings - boom, all of his mail downloads again from the date he started leaving them on the server.
Same thing goes for when he install Outlook on a new computer - which, in some cases, might be desirable, and in others, not...
The bottom line is, POP is simply not designed to work this way. The fact that it can be *manipulated* to work this way doesn't change the nature of the protocol, or the inherent problems.
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Best regards,
Charles