On Thu, Sep 28, 2017 at 2:10 PM, Yasha Karant <[email protected]> wrote: > On 09/28/2017 04:25 AM, Bruce Ferrell wrote: >> >> On 09/27/2017 09:56 PM, Yasha Karant wrote:
>> MAPI/exchange server is a royal pain and the exquilla add-on made it far >> less so for me. Your mileage may vary. >> >> > From my Tbird configuration for the email server in question: > outlook.office365.com > > Supposedly, I am using office365 that you indicate is IETF IMAP compliant. > The diagnostic on failure states "authenticated but not connected". As for > later comments in this thread, I too do not like fully integrated clients > that also run additional servers (e.g., a RDBMS system) to operate. It is > true that Mozilla has a directory in which it keeps the "data" for email, > etc., but this is one directory (and sub-tree thereof) that needs to be > copied and restored. > > Yasha Karant Storing individual messages in individual files, sacrosanct and unedited, is part of the basic IMAP specification. I agree that an additional database is usually cunnecessary. It can break down when too many thousands of files are all in the same folder, but that's easily handled by splitting off filders by date sent of the files contained therein. There are too many robust clients for IMAP to even number. I was fond of the old "Pine" software, and used to organize hooks to enable SSL for IMAPS for the public versions. "outlook.office365.com" does indicate that it's the Office365 services, which are allegedly IMAP compliant. I'd urge you to KISS: don't try ti import software such as "davmail" what has apparently only ever been supported under Ubuntu, do *not* use Java for an enitrely unnecessary "mail gateway". Work with the simplest, most robust IMAP client you can find: I admit that I switched my mail handling to Gmail some time back, for stability and well supported access of bulky email. Thunderbird used to be pretty good, and I used it recently to iron out some confusion with an upstream Office365 service. It gave me a much more accessible look at the older mail to have local copies of everything in analyzable folders.
