> On 15 May 2015, at 3:20, Kee Hinckley <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I'd have mail going back to 83 of it weren't for a disk crash in the late 
> 80's. I don't keep all my incoming mail, but I do keep all my outbound mail. 
> 
> I frequently use it for when I run across someone whose name sounds familiar. 
> Like I had a resume come across my desk a few years ago and I found that in 
> the late 90's he'd reported some bugs in a software service I ran, and in the 
> early 90's I'd reported some bugs in a software product he'd wrote.

OK, I have to admit, if I have my mail archive outsourced, I don’t get any 
autocompletion or forward-typing, when typing-in the address for a new mail. 
Mileages obviously do vary here (comfort vs having a sleek mail database).
> 
> It's kind of like a personal LinkedIn.
> 
> I used to have most of it in local mailboxes. But when I switch to mailmate, 
> I uploaded it all to the IMAP server. Which has the added benefit of giving 
> me both a local copy and an off-site backup.

I hope / I’m sure it’s not your only backup. 

But thanks, I now understand a bit better this "let all in the mailbox" 
approach, which seems to be not uncommon.

-- 
Tom




_______________________________________________
mailmate mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.freron.com/listinfo/mailmate

Reply via email to