I will give that a try and see how (well) it works. If someone has a
better idea, please let me know.

Thanks

On 9/25/2020 8:25 AM, Patrick Brunschwig wrote:
> Yes, that's a possible approach. You won't need Enigmail afterwards anymore.
>
> -Patrick
>
> On 25/09/2020 07:44, Mark wrote:
>> Thanks.... from my read of it I gather (as I'm starting with a blank
>> slate on that other machine) I would need to first install GPG4Win on it
>> and then copy my key files to that PC. I would then install TB78 and
>> also the "migration edition" of Enigmail to import the keys into TB78's
>> OpenPGP "database" 
>>
>> Is that correct? 
>>
>> If so, is there a need to leave that version of Enigmail installed after
>> the initial importation of those keys?
>>
>> Thanks Again
>>
>> On 9/24/2020 10:31 PM, Patrick Brunschwig wrote:
>>> On 25.09.2020 07:28, Mark wrote:
>>>> Forgive me if this is a bit off-topic but I hope someone can give me
>>>> some tips.
>>>>
>>>> Currently I'm using TB 68 with Enigmail and GPG4Win on one system. I
>>>> would like to try out TB 78 with it's Open PGP but want to test it on a
>>>> separate machine which does not have TB, Enigmail, nor GPG4Win on it at
>>>> all.
>>>>
>>>> How would be the best way to accomplish this so that it imports my
>>>> private and public keys into it?  The mail itself can be re-downloaded
>>>> off the servers so not real worried about that. I'm just not sure how
>>>> best to handle the PGP keys.
>>> Read the following article:
>>> https://sourceforge.net/p/enigmail/forum/announce/thread/7dcd29e5f9/
>>>
>>> -Patrick
>>>
>>>
>

_______________________________________________
enigmail-users mailing list
enigmail-users@enigmail.net
To unsubscribe or make changes to your subscription click here:
https://admin.hostpoint.ch/mailman/listinfo/enigmail-users_enigmail.net

Reply via email to