Date: Sunday, February 13, 2022 13:13:42 -0600 From: "c. marlow" fedora@cwm030.com
On Fri, 11 Feb 2022 13:41:12 -0500 Tom Horsley horsley1953@gmail.com wrote:
On Fri, 11 Feb 2022 12:15:42 -0600 fedora@cwm030.com wrote:
And what are some pros and cons switching to IMAP?
And what program do you use on Fedora for your email?
I use fetchmail to download mail from every other mail server onto my home machine, where fetchmail then injects the mail into the dovecot imap server. With dovecot sieve support, I filter the mail into appropriate IMAP folders (or simply discard it). Then I can use any email client to talk to my local IMAP server without having to convert or transfer mail anywhere.
The client I like best is claws-mail which allows be to disable html mail so I can example any plain text before deciding to actually read it (by opening in chrome).
That sounds very confusing lol.
I think if I was to use IMAP, I would redirect my email from my Web host's mailbox which only offers you 25 gigs of storage, to my FREE gmail account, since I am one of those that keeps EVERYTHING. At least GMAIL offers upgrades in storage space, where my web host doesn't.
Chris
I too have used the in-house imap server approach, for many years. There are different ways to pull mail from the MSP's imap server to your own. I happen to currently do this, with heavy filtering and folder management, via an imap client that is always up. I leave (and sometimes copying back) certain types of messages that I might need when remote on the MSP's server. Depending on my connectivity type I sometimes make my in-house server externally accessible.
Once the messages are on your own server it's easy to manage things as you wish. Other benefits of course include system backups and not being dependent on the vagaries of a mail client, and desktop machine (or worse, mobile device) for maintaining the message store.