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Augustus
November 21st 09, 10:17 PM
Why is the default setting for Windows Live Mail to download messages from
your pop mail while leaving a copy of your emails on your mail server? And
exactly where is the setting for changing this behaviour. I need it to
dowload and NOT leave a copy, just like Outlook and OE's default behaviour.
Since changing all three of our XP systems to Win7 64 Home Premium I'm
getting nonstop messages from my home email provider that my mail quota is
full. Help would be appreciated......

Death
November 21st 09, 10:24 PM
Augustus wrote this, with guidance from inner voices:

> Why is the default setting for Windows Live Mail to download messages from
> your pop mail while leaving a copy of your emails on your mail server? And
> exactly where is the setting for changing this behaviour. I need it to
> dowload and NOT leave a copy, just like Outlook and OE's default
> behaviour. Since changing all three of our XP systems to Win7 64 Home
> Premium I'm getting nonstop messages from my home email provider that my
> mail quota is full. Help would be appreciated......

Tool_Accounts_account Properties_Advanced tab_Delivery is at the bottom.

--
Vita brevis breviter in brevi finietur,
Mors venit velociter quae neminem veretur.

augustus
November 21st 09, 11:34 PM
> Tool_Accounts_account Properties_Advanced tab_Delivery is at the bottom.
>

Thanks.....I wound up having to right click on each email account to access
the delivery setting on the properties / advanced page. I wonder what the
rationale is for this mail program's default behavior of leaving a copy on
your pop mail server.

Trev[_3_]
November 21st 09, 11:39 PM
"augustus" > wrote in message
news:PN_Nm.53077$Db2.23771@edtnps83...
>> Tool_Accounts_account Properties_Advanced tab_Delivery is at the bottom.
>>
>
> Thanks.....I wound up having to right click on each email account to
> access the delivery setting on the properties / advanced page. I wonder
> what the rationale is for this mail program's default behavior of leaving
> a copy on your pop mail server.

You can then read it on any computer at work or home or even you mobile

housetrained
November 22nd 09, 08:01 AM
"Trev" > wrote in message
...
>
> "augustus" > wrote in message
> news:PN_Nm.53077$Db2.23771@edtnps83...
>>> Tool_Accounts_account Properties_Advanced tab_Delivery is at the bottom.
>>>
>>
>> Thanks.....I wound up having to right click on each email account to
>> access the delivery setting on the properties / advanced page. I wonder
>> what the rationale is for this mail program's default behavior of leaving
>> a copy on your pop mail server.
>
> You can then read it on any computer at work or home or even you mobile

....until YOU decide to delete them
--

(swap a mouse for a house to email)
Sometimes one pays most for the things one gets for nothing. - Albert
Einstein

R. C. White
November 23rd 09, 05:29 PM
Hi, Augustus.

"augustus" > wrote in message
news:PN_Nm.53077$Db2.23771@edtnps83...
>> Tool_Accounts_account Properties_Advanced tab_Delivery is at the bottom.
>
> Thanks.....I wound up having to right click on each email account to
> access the delivery setting on the properties / advanced page. I wonder
> what the rationale is for this mail program's default behavior of leaving
> a copy on your pop mail server.

Many of us have multiple computers, or dual-boot on a single computer. Many
of us use email kind of like a telephone and we don't expect read messages
to persist longer than it takes us to read them; others - for business or
personal reasons - want to keep them for hours or days or weeks - or
permanently. And, especially while making the transition from OE to WM to
WLM, we may need to download the same messages into different systems. We
probably want one of those systems to hold our archives. If we don't "leave
messages on server" for at least a little while, there will be no way easy
to store them on our main (desktop?) computer if we've read them on our
other (laptop) computer or on a friend's computer.

Those reasons are why many of us are very happy to see "leave messages" as
the default. We've seen too many wails from users who lost important
messages during a transition because they forgot to change the previous
default while testing their new mail application.

Our standard advice for users trying to choose whether to transition to WLM
from WM or OE is to use both systems side by side for a few days - but make
sure both are set to leave messages, and that one of them is set to delete
messages after a week or two. So long as both apps are used at least once
in that time, the archives will remain complete but the server would not be
clogged with mail being kept "forever".

But the great thing is that the settings are optional and can be different
for each of my mail servers. ;<)

RC
--
R. C. White, CPA
San Marcos, TX

Microsoft Windows MVP
Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8089.0726) in Win7 Ultimate x64

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