I have an account or two which are just as picky. What I use is that clicking the send button puts the message into the outbox, ready to be send (black and bold with the clock). Usually when I am ready to send I just use cmd and the - key (cmd-) and that will send the messages in the outbox. If I know I am sending a message via a pop before smtp account, I simply click the connect button first and then do the cmd- key-combo and then all servers seem to be happy.
It is a specific setting to have PM put messages with the SEND button into the outbox, ready to be sent. I think the option is somewhere in the preferences. So your script actually SHOULD work, if that SEND button is correctly configured. ---marlyse --------------------------- "mancoStudios" is evolving into "mStudios" - Please update all email and web addresses. --------------------------- [EMAIL PROTECTED] my life: http://www.marlyse.com my work: http://www.mStudios.com --------------------------- ------------ former message(s) quotes: ------------- >tell application "PowerMail" > connect to account "PROFOLK" > send waiting messages >end tell > >This does connect to my server first and sends messages afterwards, if >waiting messages exist. But they don't. >When I create a message in my account "PROFOLK" and press "send", >Powermail tries to send to the server, the server doesn't accept and the >message stays in the outbox, but NOT AS A WAITING MESSAGE! If I start the >script, it will not be recognized as such! Now, when I only save it, it >is also saved in the outbox, but again not as a message waiting to be sent! > >Maybe I want too much. Obviously Powermail cannot handle different >accounts with different needs. This account "PROFOLK" needs a different >way of treatment than my private account and the account of my own >company, which can handle send/receive the normal way, while only the on >account "PROFOLK" needs a different treatment. > >Thanks for your help so far, if someone can help me, that would be fine > >Good luck and peace to us all in 2005 and the whole future > >Florian Fürst

