Steve Robbins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > When I travel, I turn off my home machine, and have the laptop > masquerade as it, so as to receive email on the laptop. That's fine > until I return home. Now I have to merge all these mail folders.
I copy everything onto my laptop so that when it becomes the active mail machine, it's also the master keeper of all mail files. I manually set which system is in charge of mail, and its files clobber the ones on the other system when I sync them. When I just go out for a day or two and leave my home machine on and pulling my mail down, my laptop isn't the master of my mail, so I Bcc myself (with fully-qualified, non-local address) to archive outgoing mail I write while offline. There are two drawbacks to my setup: 1) When I go out for the day, I may make changes to my mail folders and spools. When I return, those changes are lost. I do this because it's critical that I not lose new mail in the spools at home, and I'm happy being overly cautious in this case. 2) If I pull down mail on my laptop and resync with my desktop machine without setting my laptop to be the master mail machine, I will lose mail. Similarly, if after I return and sync I forget to set my desktop machine to be the mail master, I'll lose mail when I sync with the laptop. I haven't had any problems yet because I've been careful enough and don't fetch mail from my laptop often. The vulnerability could be fixed with some locks and script changes, but as I'm ditching my desktop machine in a couple weeks, I won't have to worry about it anymore.