> What is this supposed to prove? It validates that you in fact do not have the unpack problem.
This unpack problem can give a false negative if you don't watch the emails very carefully. If you get multiple emails on multiple accounts, you may notice no unpacking problem, yet you may still have one. Because each account that you check, will cause the previous account's emails to be unpacked. As a result an unpacking problem can slip past unnoticed. By doing the test exactly as I laid out, in insures that you downloaded one message and only one message... and then if that message unpacks properly, it validates that you do not have a problem with the unpacking. Some people after doing my test find that they still have no problem unpacking messages... however there is at least one person that has found that they DO have the problem, and it previously just went unnoticed. My reason for the test was to verify that everyone wasn't like the one person, and that the unpack problem wasn't really just a universal problem effecting everyone, and that some people just failed to observe it. Suffice to say, it has been shown that it is NOT a universal problem. And to some, it isn't even a consistant problem. So if it works right for some people, and works right for others some of the time... then it is fixable. There has to be a common thread behind when it works and when it doesn't. Once that thread is found, a fix can be discovered. -chris <http://www.mythtech.net> ___________________________________________________________________________ To unsubscribe send a mail message with a SUBJECT line of "unsubscribe" to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> or <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

