On Friday, April 20, 2001, at 7:54:58 PM, A Curtis Martin thoughtfully wrote:


ACM> A parked message is one that cannot be deleted, neither can it be
ACM> moved. For you to move it, the parked status has to be disabled. So,
ACM> if you drag and drop a parked message to another folder, TB! will
ACM> prompt asking you if you really wish to move the message. If you say
ACM> yes, the message *will* be moved, but at the same time, it's parked
ACM> status will be disabled.

ACM> Parked messages are also handled strangely
ACM> when filtering. If a parked
ACM> message matches a filter rule whose action
ACM> involves moving the message to
ACM> another folder, a parked copy of the message
ACM> will be placed in the
ACM> destination folder. The message will not be
ACM> moved.

                 Very strange based on prior experience with e-mail. I
thought e-mail existed to be manipulated or of course read.

     What is the purpose behind it and who determines it's "parked"
status?

    ./michael

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