1. My name is.....
- Posted by Paul Kerslake <paulk at UNISERVE.COM> Aug 23, 2000
- 498 views
------=_NextPart_000_00C3_01C00D0E.B2582C00 charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable There seems to be a certain level of cunfusion on my name! My dad's name = is Paul, my sisters name is Liona. MY name is Thomas, I go into outlook = with my dads name due to some setting oddities, of course ev'ry so often = I miss-click and hit my sisters name. -Thomas ------=_NextPart_000_00C3_01C00D0E.B2582C00 charset="iso-8859-1" Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"> <HTML><HEAD> <META content=3D"text/html; charset=3Diso-8859-1" = http-equiv=3DContent-Type> <META content=3D"MSHTML 5.00.2614.3500" name=3DGENERATOR> <STYLE></STYLE> </HEAD> <BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff> <DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>There seems to be a certain level of = cunfusion on=20 my name! My dad's name is Paul, my sisters name is Liona. MY name is = Thomas, I=20 go into outlook with my dads name due to some setting oddities, of = course ev'ry=20 so often I miss-click and hit my sisters name.</FONT></DIV> <DIV> </DIV> ------=_NextPart_000_00C3_01C00D0E.B2582C00--
2. Re: My name is.....
- Posted by Whoever <irv at ELLIJAY.COM> Aug 24, 2000
- 464 views
On Wed, 23 Aug 2000, Thomas Kerslake wrote: > > There seems to be a certain level of cunfusion on my name! My dad's name is > Paul Thomas: I think you can change the name in the From: line to whatever you like, as long as you don't change the part in <> , the mail still works. Regards, Whoever
3. Re: My name is.....
- Posted by Dan B Moyer <DANMOYER at PRODIGY.NET> Aug 24, 2000
- 464 views
Whoever, Exactly *where* should Thomas change the "from:" to remove the confusion generated by his using his dad's email account? I thought at first that you meant in the list subscription, but I checked, and he already has his subscription to the list entered as "Thomas Kerslake". Dan Moyer ----- Original Message ----- From: "Whoever" <irv at ELLIJAY.COM> To: <EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU> Sent: Thursday, August 24, 2000 7:28 AM Subject: Re: My name is..... > On Wed, 23 Aug 2000, Thomas Kerslake wrote: > > > > There seems to be a certain level of cunfusion on my name! My dad's name is Paul > > Thomas: I think you can change the name in the From: line to whatever you like, > as long as you don't change the part in <> , the mail still works. > > Regards, > Whoever
4. Re: My name is.....
- Posted by Someone Else <irv at ELLIJAY.COM> Aug 24, 2000
- 466 views
- Last edited Aug 25, 2000
On Thu, 24 Aug 2000, Dan B Moyer wrote: > Whoever, > > Exactly *where* should Thomas change the "from:" to remove the confusion > generated by his using his dad's email account? I thought at first that you > meant in the list subscription, but I checked, and he already has his > subscription to the list entered as "Thomas Kerslake". > > Dan Moyer Using kmail, I clicked on View, and selected "all fields". This enables the display of the From: , Reply to: , Bcc: ...etc. e-mail headers. Then just type over the name in the From: field. Since my "Whoever" mail got posted to the list, I guess that the listserver is only interested in verifying the e-mail address. AFAIK, MS has a similar menu option. Regards, Irv
5. Re: My name is.....
- Posted by Dan B Moyer <DANMOYER at PRODIGY.NET> Aug 24, 2000
- 463 views
Irv, As far as I can tell, & I could easily be wrong, MS OutlookExpress *doesn't* include "from" in the header it shows, just "to, Cc, Bcc, & subject", both in a reply and a new message. I suspected that since you were using kmail, having the option to change the "from" might be a feature of that which wasn't in OE, which he's using. Dan ----- Original Message ----- From: "Someone Else" <irv at ELLIJAY.COM> To: <EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU> Sent: Thursday, August 24, 2000 6:56 PM Subject: Re: My name is..... > On Thu, 24 Aug 2000, Dan B Moyer wrote: > > Whoever, > > > > Exactly *where* should Thomas change the "from:" to remove the confusion > > generated by his using his dad's email account? I thought at first that you > > meant in the list subscription, but I checked, and he already has his > > subscription to the list entered as "Thomas Kerslake". > > > > Dan Moyer > > Using kmail, I clicked on View, and selected "all fields". > This enables the display of the From: , Reply to: , Bcc: ...etc. > e-mail headers. Then just type over the name in the From: field. > Since my "Whoever" mail got posted to the list, I guess that > the listserver is only interested in verifying the e-mail address. > > AFAIK, MS has a similar menu option. > > Regards, > Irv
6. Re: My name is.....
- Posted by Dan B Moyer <DANMOYER at PRODIGY.NET> Aug 25, 2000
- 473 views
Thomas, The confusion that people sometimes have with what your name is, of course, comes from the fact that the name which is presented to us in the "from" heading of the messages from you is either "Paul", or sometimes "Liona"; although you sometimes *sign* your own name in your postings, one of the things that is *most* visible to people as they scan the postings is the name in the "from" field, so that's what people are inclined to remember strongest, so that's why they sometimes get confused when they respond. Now, your posting seem to be generated from Outlook Express 5, and from the fact that your father and sister seem to have their own "identities" established in OE, (which I'm pretty sure is what *makes* their names display in the "from" field), it would seem that, (with your fathers permission of course), you could have your own "identity" similarly established, which would resolve your identity confusion here on the Euphoria list. I did check this on my system, and I could relatively easily create an "identity" of "not Thomas" in OE5, which, when I sent myself an email, had "not Thomas" in the "from" field. If you would pass this info on to your father, maybe it would help. Dan Moyer ----- Original Message ----- From: "Paul Kerslake" <paulk at UNISERVE.COM> To: <EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU> Sent: Wednesday, August 23, 2000 2:30 PM Subject: My name is..... There seems to be a certain level of cunfusion on my name! My dad's name is Paul, my sisters name is Liona. MY name is Thomas, I go into outlook with my dads name due to some setting oddities, of course ev'ry so often I miss-click and hit my sisters name. -Thomas
7. Re: My name is.....
- Posted by cense <cense at mail.ru> Aug 25, 2000
- 462 views
On Thu, 24 Aug 2000, Someone Else wrote: > > Using kmail, I clicked on View, and selected "all fields". > This enables the display of the From: , Reply to: , Bcc: ...etc. > e-mail headers. Then just type over the name in the From: field. > Since my "Whoever" mail got posted to the list, I guess that > the listserver is only interested in verifying the e-mail address. > > AFAIK, MS has a similar menu option. > > Regards, > Irv my version of kmail is too old to have that option. maybe that is why i am having problems with my return address always showing up as my own and not the list. -- cense a member of the ak-software development team http://ak-software.virtualave.net/ contract work for Web Velocity IT inc. http://www.webvelocity.ca/
8. Re: My name is.....
- Posted by gebrandariz <gebrandariz at YAHOO.COM> Aug 25, 2000
- 474 views
Dan, Irv, Paul Kerslake & everybody, In Outlook Express: While creating a new message, you can choose a "From" header from a clickable listbox. This listbox includes all accounts you have assigned to the current OE identity (default=none, i.e. all accounts equally available) and/or Windows user profile (default=same). Whatever your Windows config and mail client, you can create as many Windows mail accounts as you like, even for the same actual mail account. E.g. your real-world account is <jsmith at somemail.com>, then you tell Windows to create accounts "John Smith", "John Smith, Jr.", "Mary Smith", "Nancy Smith", "Monster Baby Smith" and "The Smith Family Tesseract Flattening Co., Inc.", all pointing to the same mail address. In OE, go to >Tools >Accounts. Viewing downloaded messages in the main OE display, you can configure the message list window's headers by right-clicking on any of its headers and choosing "Columns..", or by selecting the View>Columns option of the main menu. So, Paul can still use his dad's account and list registration, but can identify himself as whoever he wants. Luck. Gerardo E. Brandariz ----- Original Message ----- From: Dan B Moyer <DANMOYER at PRODIGY.NET> To: <EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU> Sent: Thursday, August 24, 2000 11:25 PM Subject: Re: My name is..... > Irv, > > As far as I can tell, & I could easily be wrong, MS OutlookExpress *doesn't* > include "from" in the header it shows, just "to, Cc, Bcc, & subject", both > in a reply and a new message. I suspected that since you were using kmail, > having the option to change the "from" might be a feature of that which > wasn't in OE, which he's using. > > Dan > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Someone Else" <irv at ELLIJAY.COM> > To: <EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU> > Sent: Thursday, August 24, 2000 6:56 PM > Subject: Re: My name is..... > > > > On Thu, 24 Aug 2000, Dan B Moyer wrote: > > > Whoever, > > > > > > Exactly *where* should Thomas change the "from:" to remove the confusion > > > generated by his using his dad's email account? I thought at first that > you > > > meant in the list subscription, but I checked, and he already has his > > > subscription to the list entered as "Thomas Kerslake". > > > > > > Dan Moyer > > > > Using kmail, I clicked on View, and selected "all fields". > > This enables the display of the From: , Reply to: , Bcc: ...etc. > > e-mail headers. Then just type over the name in the From: field. > > Since my "Whoever" mail got posted to the list, I guess that > > the listserver is only interested in verifying the e-mail address. > > > > AFAIK, MS has a similar menu option. > > > > Regards, > > Irv __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Talk to your friends online with Yahoo! Messenger. http://im.yahoo.com
9. Re: My name is.....
- Posted by Dan B Moyer <DANMOYER at PRODIGY.NET> Aug 27, 2000
- 457 views
Gerardo, I *think* Thomas (aka Paul, his dad) is getting or going to get his "identity" resolved, at least that's what I think he said here recently. I think he is using OE *5*, and the easiest way to fix his problem there is to go to "File" and then "Identities", then "Add New Identity", and then add a new identity to their existing email account. I think maybe "Identities" is what you are referring to when you suggest setting up new "accounts"? And in OE5, I don't find any "From" clickable listbox at all; even if I select view "all headers", it just adds "Bcc", no "from" Dan ----- Original Message ----- From: "gebrandariz" <gebrandariz at YAHOO.COM> To: <EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU> Sent: Friday, August 25, 2000 8:13 AM Subject: Re: My name is..... > Dan, Irv, Paul Kerslake & everybody, > > In Outlook Express: > > While creating a new message, you can choose a "From" header from a > clickable listbox. This listbox includes all accounts you have assigned to > the current OE identity (default=none, i.e. all accounts equally available) > and/or Windows user profile (default=same). Whatever your Windows config and > mail client, you can create as many Windows mail accounts as you like, even > for the same actual mail account. E.g. your real-world account is > <jsmith at somemail.com>, then you tell Windows to create accounts "John > Smith", "John Smith, Jr.", "Mary Smith", "Nancy Smith", "Monster Baby Smith" > and "The Smith Family Tesseract Flattening Co., Inc.", all pointing to the > same mail address. In OE, go to >Tools >Accounts. > > Viewing downloaded messages in the main OE display, you can configure the > message list window's headers by right-clicking on any of its headers and > choosing "Columns..", or by selecting the View>Columns option of the main > menu. > > So, Paul can still use his dad's account and list registration, but can > identify himself as whoever he wants. > > Luck. > Gerardo E. Brandariz > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Dan B Moyer <DANMOYER at PRODIGY.NET> > To: <EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU> > Sent: Thursday, August 24, 2000 11:25 PM > Subject: Re: My name is..... > > > > Irv, > > > > As far as I can tell, & I could easily be wrong, MS OutlookExpress > *doesn't* > > include "from" in the header it shows, just "to, Cc, Bcc, & subject", both > > in a reply and a new message. I suspected that since you were using > kmail, > > having the option to change the "from" might be a feature of that which > > wasn't in OE, which he's using. > > > > Dan > > > > > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: "Someone Else" <irv at ELLIJAY.COM> > > To: <EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU> > > Sent: Thursday, August 24, 2000 6:56 PM > > Subject: Re: My name is..... > > > > > > > On Thu, 24 Aug 2000, Dan B Moyer wrote: > > > > Whoever, > > > > > > > > Exactly *where* should Thomas change the "from:" to remove the > confusion > > > > generated by his using his dad's email account? I thought at first > that > > you > > > > meant in the list subscription, but I checked, and he already has his > > > > subscription to the list entered as "Thomas Kerslake". > > > > > > > > Dan Moyer > > > > > > Using kmail, I clicked on View, and selected "all fields". > > > This enables the display of the From: , Reply to: , Bcc: ...etc. > > > e-mail headers. Then just type over the name in the From: field. > > > Since my "Whoever" mail got posted to the list, I guess that > > > the listserver is only interested in verifying the e-mail address. > > > > > > AFAIK, MS has a similar menu option. > > > > > > Regards, > > > Irv > > > __________________________________________________ > Do You Yahoo!? > Talk to your friends online with Yahoo! Messenger. > http://im.yahoo.com
10. Re: My name is.....
- Posted by gebrandariz <gebrandariz at YAHOO.COM> Aug 30, 2000
- 466 views
Dan, and everybody. A little more on this off-topic subject, but I guess it may be useful to some, being that the Outlook Express documentation is rather superficial. ----- Original Message ----- From: Dan B Moyer <DANMOYER at PRODIGY.NET> To: <EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU> Sent: Sunday, August 27, 2000 9:54 AM Subject: Re: My name is..... > Gerardo, > > I *think* Thomas (aka Paul, his dad) is getting or going to get his > "identity" resolved, at least that's what I think he said here recently. Yes, only I read it after I sent my previous. I don't have the time to check the list on a daily basis.Sorry. > I think he is using OE *5*, and the easiest way to fix his problem there is > to go to "File" and then "Identities", then "Add New Identity", and then add > a new identity to their existing email account. I think maybe "Identities" > is what you are referring to when you suggest setting up new "accounts"? Not exactly. It boils down to this: * Windows 9x will let you have one or more "user profiles" (if you didn't enable user profiles in the control panel, you still have a single unnamed profile, transparent and common for every user). * You can, of course, have as many actual mail accounts as you want. Not Windows accounts, real ones, as in myself at somesite.com. In turn, some of these accounts may redirect your mail toward others. * In the control panel, the Internet applet (which can also be invoked from Internet Explorer) will let you configure one or more connections (to your ISP/s). Some of these you may use for mail only. These will be your "Windows mail accounts", sinco you need some sort of Internet connection to download mail (I bet you already knew that). * Within Outlook Express (Tools menu), you can configure as many "OE mail accounts" as you like. They will usually reflect you actual external accounts, but they don't have to. Dad may have signed for dad at somesite.com, family at somesite.com and homeoffice at somesite.com, and the kids be only allowed to use the second one, so within their own "user profiles" and/or "OE identities" (more below) they will configure just one "OE mail account", called whatever they fancy, but pointing to the "family" actual account. Mom's "user profile" will have OE5 add an "OE account" that calls the "homeoffice" account, and nobody but Dad sets up an "OE account" for "dad" (guess why). Those were the "accounts" I was speaking of. * If you have a single-user Windows config, Outlook Express will always see every "OE mail account" you have configured. If you have enabled "user profiles", you will only see those "OE mail accounts" you have configured from within that same "user profile". The "OE mail accounts" can be imported/exported between "user profiles" as *.iaf files. Alternatively, you may configure the same "OE mail accounts" over and over again for every "user profile" you have created; or some, or none; or maybe with different properties, say "user profile Johnny" activates automatic disconnect after download, but "user profile Mary" doesn't. * OE5 will also let you create additional "identities" (Files menu), besides the default one you start with. "OE identities" are really useful if you haven't enabled "user profiles"; they work just like "mini user profiles", only within OE. "Identities" on top of "user profiles" are only useful to hide things from yourself. * Identity Alpha doesn't see identity Beta's folders, but they share everything else, including "OE accounts" and connections. Neither identity Alpha nor Beta see identity Gamma ("OE accounts", connections, nothing), for Alpha and Beta lie within user profile A (don't ask me why, see above) and Gamma was created from user profile B. * The only way an identity (default or additional) from within a certain user profile can share anything with another from within a different user profile is (a) using Outlook (not Express, the big one with MS Office); (b) using MS Exchange, which requires creating "services" and "profiles", from the Mail applet in the control panel (these "profiles" have no relation whatsoever to the Windows "user profiles"); or (c) using the OE5 import facility (File menu); not the "export", OE5 can't export to OE5. None of this is mandatory, all defaults work fine, it can all be combined and extended and mixed and juggled ad nauseam, every additional step complicates everything, and should be taken only if you really need it and are willing to pay the price. For example, if "user profile A" downloads a message meant for "user profile B", OE5 would let him/her do the following: (1) move the message to an ad hoc folder, like "New messages for B"; (2) tell B that there's new mail, and log out; so (3) B can log into Windows (as "B", of course), open OE5, go to File->Import->Messages, selects "Microsoft Outlook Express 5" (which is A's mail client too, how surprising), then choose "from a directory" (which is not the default, the default being "from another identity"); that, in turn opens a standard file selection box, where B can browse around and click on A's mail storage (DOS) folder (more on this); then another nice box showing all of A's OE5 mail folders, click on "New messages for B", and lo! all messages there instantly copied to a folder of the same name within B's OE mail storage folder; then, of course, (4) the next time A logs in, s/he'll have to delete all messages within "New messages for B", or B will be importing the same messages over and over ... Note 1: Upon creating Windows user profiles, OE5 will assign a default storage directory for each profile as %windir%\Profiles\some_profile_name\Application Data\Identities\{some_identity_id}\Microsoft\Outlook Express\. A little hard on browsing. So I recommend changing it (Tools->Options) to, say, C:\OE5 Mail, with a subdirectory for every "user profile". Note 2: When B starts the import wizard and browses A's storage folders, every internal folder of A's is visible, and B can copy every message there to his/her own folders. So much for security. Stow your dirty pictures somewhere else. Note 3: Some mail providers will let you "keep messages in the server", i.e. not delete them after you've downloaded but keep them for a number of days (in OE5, go to Tools->Accounts->Mail->Properties->Advanced). This lets A delete every downloaded message meant for B (or apply a "rule" that inhibits B-message downloading), and B can do the same. However, big messages may soon fill up assigned server space. > And in OE5, I don't find any "From" clickable listbox at all; even if I > select view "all headers", it just adds "Bcc", no "from" The clickable "From" I meant is the one that appears on top, right under the menu (and the buttons, if you have them enabled), when you are writing a new message or answering or forwarding one. Each "From" option reflects an "OE5 mail account" you have configured for the current "OE5 identity" within the current "Windows user profile". Still awake, anybody? Fine. As for networking environments ... (sigh) Gerardo E. Brandariz _________________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
11. Re: My name is.....
- Posted by Dan B Moyer <DANMOYER at PRODIGY.NET> Aug 30, 2000
- 457 views
- Last edited Aug 31, 2000
Gerardo, <grin!> Yes, OE doc is really the pits. Thanks, I'll archive this in case I need it sometime. But I really *don't* have that clickable "From", just "To:", "Cc", & "Subject" (& if I select "View all headers", then I can also see "Bcc". I suspect it has to do with NOT having multiple accounts set up? Dan ----- Original Message ----- From: "gebrandariz" <gebrandariz at YAHOO.COM> To: <EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU> Sent: Tuesday, August 29, 2000 9:58 PM Subject: Re: My name is..... > Dan, and everybody. > > A little more on this off-topic subject, but I guess it may be useful to > some, being that the Outlook Express documentation is rather superficial. > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Dan B Moyer <DANMOYER at PRODIGY.NET> > To: <EUPHORIA at LISTSERV.MUOHIO.EDU> > Sent: Sunday, August 27, 2000 9:54 AM > Subject: Re: My name is..... > > > > Gerardo, > > > > I *think* Thomas (aka Paul, his dad) is getting or going to get his > > "identity" resolved, at least that's what I think he said here recently. > > Yes, only I read it after I sent my previous. I don't have the time to check > the list on a daily basis.Sorry. > > > I think he is using OE *5*, and the easiest way to fix his problem there > is > > to go to "File" and then "Identities", then "Add New Identity", and then > add > > a new identity to their existing email account. I think maybe > "Identities" > > is what you are referring to when you suggest setting up new "accounts"? > > Not exactly. It boils down to this: > > * Windows 9x will let you have one or more "user profiles" (if you didn't > enable user profiles in the control panel, you still have a single unnamed > profile, transparent and common for every user). > > * You can, of course, have as many actual mail accounts as you want. Not > Windows accounts, real ones, as in myself at somesite.com. In turn, some of > these accounts may redirect your mail toward others. > > * In the control panel, the Internet applet (which can also be invoked from > Internet Explorer) will let you configure one or more connections (to your > ISP/s). Some of these you may use for mail only. These will be your "Windows > mail accounts", sinco you need some sort of Internet connection to download > mail (I bet you already knew that). > > * Within Outlook Express (Tools menu), you can configure as many "OE mail > accounts" as you like. They will usually reflect you actual external > accounts, but they don't have to. Dad may have signed for dad at somesite.com, > family at somesite.com and homeoffice at somesite.com, and the kids be only > allowed to use the second one, so within their own "user profiles" and/or > "OE identities" (more below) they will configure just one "OE mail account", > called whatever they fancy, but pointing to the "family" actual account. > Mom's "user profile" will have OE5 add an "OE account" that calls the > "homeoffice" account, and nobody but Dad sets up an "OE account" for "dad" > (guess why). Those were the "accounts" I was speaking of. > > * If you have a single-user Windows config, Outlook Express will always see > every "OE mail account" you have configured. If you have enabled "user > profiles", you will only see those "OE mail accounts" you have configured > from within that same "user profile". The "OE mail accounts" can be > imported/exported between "user profiles" as *.iaf files. Alternatively, you > may configure the same "OE mail accounts" over and over again for every > "user profile" you have created; or some, or none; or maybe with different > properties, say "user profile Johnny" activates automatic disconnect after > download, but "user profile Mary" doesn't. > > * OE5 will also let you create additional "identities" (Files menu), besides > the default one you start with. "OE identities" are really useful if you > haven't enabled "user profiles"; they work just like "mini user profiles", > only within OE. "Identities" on top of "user profiles" are only useful to > hide things from yourself. > > * Identity Alpha doesn't see identity Beta's folders, but they share > everything else, including "OE accounts" and connections. Neither identity > Alpha nor Beta see identity Gamma ("OE accounts", connections, nothing), for > Alpha and Beta lie within user profile A (don't ask me why, see above) and > Gamma was created from user profile B. > > * The only way an identity (default or additional) from within a certain > user profile can share anything with another from within a different user > profile is (a) using Outlook (not Express, the big one with MS Office); (b) > using MS Exchange, which requires creating "services" and "profiles", from > the Mail applet in the control panel (these "profiles" have no relation > whatsoever to the Windows "user profiles"); or (c) using the OE5 import > facility (File menu); not the "export", OE5 can't export to OE5. > > None of this is mandatory, all defaults work fine, it can all be combined > and extended and mixed and juggled ad nauseam, every additional step > complicates everything, and should be taken only if you really need it and > are willing to pay the price. For example, if "user profile A" downloads a > message meant for "user profile B", OE5 would let him/her do the following: > > (1) move the message to an ad hoc folder, like "New messages for B"; > (2) tell B that there's new mail, and log out; so > (3) B can log into Windows (as "B", of course), open OE5, go to > File->Import->Messages, selects "Microsoft Outlook Express 5" (which is A's > mail client too, how surprising), then choose "from a directory" (which is > not the default, the default being "from another identity"); that, in turn > opens a standard file selection box, where B can browse around and click on > A's mail storage (DOS) folder (more on this); then another nice box showing > all of A's OE5 mail folders, click on "New messages for B", and lo! all > messages there instantly copied to a folder of the same name within B's OE > mail storage folder; then, of course, > (4) the next time A logs in, s/he'll have to delete all messages within "New > messages for B", or B will be importing the same messages over and over ... > > Note 1: Upon creating Windows user profiles, OE5 will assign a default > storage directory for each profile as > %windir%\Profiles\some_profile_name\Application > Data\Identities\{some_identity_id}\Microsoft\Outlook Express\. A little hard > on browsing. So I recommend changing it (Tools->Options) to, say, C:\OE5 > Mail, with a subdirectory for every "user profile". > > Note 2: When B starts the import wizard and browses A's storage folders, > every internal folder of A's is visible, and B can copy every message there > to his/her own folders. So much for security. Stow your dirty pictures > somewhere else. > > Note 3: Some mail providers will let you "keep messages in the server", i.e. > not delete them after you've downloaded but keep them for a number of days > (in OE5, go to Tools->Accounts->Mail->Properties->Advanced). This lets A > delete every downloaded message meant for B (or apply a "rule" that inhibits > B-message downloading), and B can do the same. However, big messages may > soon fill up assigned server space. > > > And in OE5, I don't find any "From" clickable listbox at all; even if I > > select view "all headers", it just adds "Bcc", no "from" > > The clickable "From" I meant is the one that appears on top, right under the > menu (and the buttons, if you have them enabled), when you are writing a new > message or answering or forwarding one. Each "From" option reflects an "OE5 > mail account" you have configured for the current "OE5 identity" within the > current "Windows user profile". > > Still awake, anybody? Fine. As for networking environments ... > > (sigh) > > Gerardo E. Brandariz > > > > _________________________________________________________ > Do You Yahoo!? > Get your free @yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com >