>For importing that much mails, you need a license.

I switched to Powermail a few months ago, and I have very few complaints.
 It has features I haven't seen elsewhere that make it live up to its
name. (Location-based SMTP-server override was the killer feature for me.)

However, one of my few complaints is that the 200-message trial limit
makes no sense for power users of email, which would appear to be target
market for Powermail.  Just about anyone serious enough about email to be
willing to spend money rather than use any of the numerous free options
is going to have more than 200 messages to import as the very first step
in checking out the product.

Because of this I could not really test Powermail at all before I bought
it, so I almost didn't buy it.  I was tempted by the feature list, which
I had not seen on any other Mac OS X native emailer, so I took a chance.
 I'm glad I did, as it is very good, but the trial system was useless to
me and is clearly annoying to others.  This is almost certainly costing
CTM sales.

So I have a suggestion for CTM: Change the limit to 200 messages sent or
received rather than 200 messages in the database.

This allows power users to check out such things as how well it searches
a large database (ahem), how well it imports from other mailers, how fast
it navigates a large database, etc., all of which are important to power
users, while still imposing a limit so that significant use requires a
license.

Raúl

--
Raúl Vera
Director
Orbit 3 Pty Ltd
8 Coneill Place
NSW 2037
Australia


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