> Von: JC <[email protected]>
> On Tue, Jan 22, 2013 at 8:42 PM, Adam Tauno Williams
> <[email protected]
> > wrote:
> 
> > On Tue, 2013-01-22 at 11:27 -0600, JC wrote:
> > > Would it be worth the
> > > change if it can be done?
> >
> > Certainly, IMAP is in every way superior;  POP is a dead legacy
> > solution, it certainly is not appropriate for a mailbox accessed by
> > multiple devices.

> Ookaaay.  I'm not at all up on the email environment.  Exactly where would
> this dragging take place? And where would this IMAP account be created?

I would strongly suggest that you stick to POP. It has served you well and 
spurious technical "superiority" as claimed above is meaningless when you 
struggle to understand the basic concepts. Yes, IMAP can do more things, but 
you can also mess up worse with IMAP. 

And awilliam@ is most certainly wrong that POP is inappropriate to use on an 
account shared with several devices. 

POP is simple, robust, keeps your emails on your local computer and has no 
ambitions to provide you with an overarching mail management. The disadvantage 
list is short: If you delete a mail on your computer it is still on the mail 
server. If you move a mail out of the main inbox into another folder on server, 
before it is downloaded via POP, you won't get it on the computer. 

On the other side you have your email secure on the local server and when you 
lose access to your server account, move it or get hacked they are still there 
on your local PC. 

IMAP on the other side can be very fickle when several devices access the same 
mailbox. If you have not used it before - there are many new ways of losing 
email permanently. 

Your emails on this list suggest to me that you will get all the disadvantages 
and none of the advantages.   

Peter
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