Chris Hilts zei:
>> Correct, and that's why the BODY.PEEK syntax is described in RFC2060.
>> BODY.PEEK doesn't touch the flags and apparently your other client doesn't
>> make use of it.
>
> I was under the impression that the other client was a POP3 client, which
> means RFC 2060 doesn't apply.
>
> Correct, and that's why the BODY.PEEK syntax is described in RFC2060.
> BODY.PEEK doesn't touch the flags and apparently your other client doesn't
> make use of it.
I was under the impression that the other client was a POP3 client, which
means RFC 2060 doesn't apply.
--
Chris Hilts
[EMAIL PRO
Jonathan Angliss zei:
> Hello Jordan,
> On Wednesday, December 04, 2002, Jordan Thompson wrote...
>
>> Whenever I open my mail page, all of the messages look like they have been
>> read. I am downloading messages to another machine (but leaving a copy on
>> the server) - is this causing this "pro
Hello Jordan,
On Wednesday, December 04, 2002, Jordan Thompson wrote...
> Whenever I open my mail page, all of the messages look like they have been
> read. I am downloading messages to another machine (but leaving a copy on
> the server) - is this causing this "problem?"
It's not a problem, b
> Whenever I open my mail page, all of the messages look like they have been
> read. I am downloading messages to another machine (but leaving a copy on
> the server) - is this causing this "problem?"
I assume you mean you're using POP to grab the messages, then looking at
them later via IMAP &
Whenever I open my mail page, all of the messages look like they have been
read. I am downloading messages to another machine (but leaving a copy on
the server) - is this causing this "problem?"
thanks,
Jordan
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