I'm looking into GMail now. I didn't realize it had so many features.

GMail for domains (Organizations) carries $50/user/year fee which seems a
little steep, or maybe I'm just miserly.

On Tue, December 30, 2008 5:09 pm, Stanley Brinkerhoff wrote:
> I second the switch to IMAP -- and also possibly consider switching to
> GMail
> (or Gmail for Domains).  I do the same thing you speak of -- except when I
> use an unconfigured machine I just use Googles beautiful webmail.  My
> Blackberry works with their native client.  I routinely have a desktop,
> laptop, cell phone, and work computer logged into the GMail account.
>
> GMail can also pull mail via POP from GMAVT.net if you wish to retain your
> gpbrown address!
>
> Stan
>
> On Tue, Dec 30, 2008 at 5:05 PM, Josh Sled <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Gary Brown <[email protected]> writes:
>> >       The main purpose for this is so that my wife and I can share one
>> email
>> > (pop) account and message repository (Inbox, Sent, etc...) from
>> different
>> > user accounts on the same computer. Any additional functionality would
>> be
>> > great.
>>
>> Switch to IMAP … it's almost 2009, already. :)
>>
>> But seriously, switch to IMAP.  Have an IMAP server where all email is
>> stored, and connect from multiple/various clients (thunderbird,
>> squirrelmail (web based), blackberry service, outlook, &c.).  Pull email
>> From your ISP via fetchmail (via either POP or IMAP).
>>
>> I've done this for a long time.  fetchmail pulls my mail via imap(s)
>> From dreamhost every five minutes.  Local delivery goes through procmail
>> to sort into maildir folders in my homedir.  courier-imap is setup to
>> serve those folders directly.  I primarily connect via Gnus (in emacs),
>> but have used thunderbird (when on the laptop), squirrelmail (when
>> traveling) and mutt (when gnus is misbehaving).
>>
>> --
>> ...jsled
>> http://asynchronous.org/ - a=jsled; b=asynchronous.org; echo $...@${b}
>>
>

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