I'm glad my message gave you an idea. ;) On the context of having part of POP3 messages kept in the server, I find Emacs Gnus the best one when it comes to doing that because you simply specify how many days you want to leave them there and --- as long as the server doesn't suffer from an issue that would make it loose or change the date/timestamps --- then Emacs Gnus will know what to do.
As for the issue with IMAP, see [1][2]. [1] See the messages and discussions that appear bellow <https://twitter.com/openmailbox_org/status/894122458181226496>. [2] I'm sorry for linking to a site which forces non-free client-side software through JavaScript, I'll summarize what I see so far in [1] --- although I'm not a developer nor a network expert --- : IMAP, even with "IMAP IDLE" tends to consume more resources specially for those who "live in mobile" and those who have clients that leave IMAP connections open, because the server has to keep track of these and of how many connections that user has in other mail clients, besides having to keep all the connections alive and in sync. 2017-12-04T03:26:14+0000 Andrew Nesbit wrote: > This is nice if you only ever access your email from a single > host. Otherwise you end up with bits of email scattered over all over > the place. > > Hey wait! Your comment has given me an idea, which would solve a > problem I've been having for a long time. Thanks! > > > Have you got a link? I'd be really curious to read that. And also how > they define "resources". > > Andrew _______________________________________________ libreplanet-discuss mailing list [email protected] https://lists.libreplanet.org/mailman/listinfo/libreplanet-discuss
