| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 1007.1 |  | BUSY::SLAB | Crash, burn ... when will I learn? | Wed Apr 16 1997 19:28 | 7 | 
|  |     
    	Set up an Inbox Assistant and forward all of your incoming Exchange
    	mail to a VMS or All-IN-1 account.
    
    	But why did you start a new note instead of adding a reply to the
    	[heh ... "the"?  There are already two of them] existing note?
    
 | 
| 1007.2 | Interesting workaround, but... | EPS::DEANE |  | Thu Apr 17 1997 15:55 | 14 | 
|  | re: .1
>    	Set up an Inbox Assistant and forward all of your incoming Exchange
>    	mail to a VMS or All-IN-1 account.
Thanks. Interesting workaround. But it's not what I really want. I want ALL my mail
sent to one, and only one, place. I want to be able to read it from multiple
places. I don't want to have to go into Exchange after I've read the "forwarded
mail" on VMS or All-in-1 and have to re-read and re-manage it a second time. 
Know of a third party or midnight project that does what I want it to do?
Tom
 | 
| 1007.3 |  | AXEL::FOLEY | http://axel.zko.dec.com | Thu Apr 17 1997 21:17 | 8 | 
|  | RE: .2,.0
	When Exchange 5.0 comes up on the CCS servers, you'll be
	able to get at your mail with a POP3 client. I'll leave it up
	to you on finding a text based POP3 client. I'm sure there is
	one.
							mike
 | 
| 1007.4 |  | HELIX::SONTAKKE |  | Fri Apr 18 1997 16:23 | 3 | 
|  |     POP3 does NOT satisfy that requirement.  IMAP4 does though.
    
    You don't have centralized mail if you are using POP3.
 | 
| 1007.5 | Refiling available in some POP3 servers | THEBAY::WIEGLEB | Last day is May 2. Farewell! | Fri Apr 18 1997 21:54 | 11 | 
|  |     Actually, a number of POP3 servers allow you to just read a mail
    message from the server without deleting it as well.  Some of the more
    sophisticated ones will just refile your messages into a "Seen" or
    "Read" folder after you've read them from the POP3 client so that you
    won't retrieve them a second time from the POP3 client and can still
    get at the messages from alternate clients later.
    
    I think Innosoft PMDF and perhaps UCX (Digital TCP/IP Services) allow
    this type of configuration.
    
    - Dave
 | 
| 1007.6 |  | CIRCUS::GOETZE | Tibetan karma not Made in China | Fri Apr 18 1997 23:02 | 7 | 
|  |     The other problem with forwarding (at least the way I have my Exchange
    mail setup) is that the originating addresses are lost; all I can see
    are the full names of the sender and recipients. If I get much mail
    from Smiths, it's a guessing game how to reply to them. Not very
    useful.
    
       erik
 | 
| 1007.7 |  | AXEL::FOLEY | http://axel.zko.dec.com | Mon Apr 21 1997 14:35 | 5 | 
|  | RE: .5
	Fixed in Exchange 5.0.
							mike
 | 
| 1007.8 | You CAN leave your message up on the server... | JULIET::HARRIS_MA | Networks Sales Exec | Mon Apr 21 1997 19:05 | 10 | 
|  |     I have an ISP who provides POP3 mail to me, and I configured it to
    leave all the messages ON THE SERVER, so that I can access it
    flawlessly from Netscape Internet MAIL, or Microsoft Internet Mail,
    etc. Interchangeably.
    
    Presumably, Exchange 5 server will act the same way, allowing some
    cell-based POP mail client to talk to it ?// I think so anyway...
    
    Mark
    
 |