Hello Roelof, On Sat, 8 Jan 2011 16:53:29 +0100 GMT (08/Jan/11, 22:53 PM +0700 GMT), Roelof Otten wrote:
TF>> I just cut this down to the points that concern my follow-up question: TF>> I just found an old USB stick with Voyager. Trying to run it requires TF>> a password, and I have tried all the combinations I could think of, TF>> but cannot remember the old password. RO> In that case the stored messages are lost to everyone, including to RO> you. That's why making backups was so important with Voyager. I see. I used Voyager only as a crutch when travelling, as Thailand's internet access was too slow and unreliable for IMAP or webmail. This has changed in the meantime, and I now use webmail if I cannot use POP with my laptop or IMAP with the iPhone. TF>> BTW, does the latest Voyager allow plaintext if the user so decides? RO> Don't know, never had any real use for Voyager, so I stopped testing RO> it. But you could download the latest version and try it for yourself. Never mind, I don't really have a need for Voyager any more. However, it was indeed a very usefull tool at the time. I was just curious as to what mails were on that old USB stick, which I just found during house moving. Thanks for your reply. -- Cheers, Thomas. http://thomas.fernandez.hat-gar-keine-homepage.de/ Message reply created with The Bat! 4.2.36.4 under Windows XP 5.1 Build 2600 Service Pack 3 ________________________________________________ Current version is 4.2.23 | 'Using TBUDL' information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html

