On Tue, Dec 09, 2014 at 10:57:33AM +0000, John Long wrote: > On Tue, Dec 09, 2014 at 10:33:05AM +0000, Chris Green wrote: > > On Tue, Dec 09, 2014 at 06:21:31PM +1100, Cameron Simpson wrote: > > > On 08Dec2014 22:04, Chris Green <c...@isbd.net> wrote: > > > >Doesn't anyone use IMAP? I must admit when I tried it (a few times > > > >over the years, but not very recently) it never felt quite as easy and > > > >transparent as using mutt on a local mail spool. > > > > > > I would advocate trying offlineimap. I am a huge fan of having one's > > > mail local to the machine for all the reasons you have outlined. > > > > > [snip] > > > > Well, looking at offlineimap has lead me to notmuch as well which has > > got me thinking down those lines too! :-) > > > > However, for me, moving to offlineimap involves quite a bit of > > reconfiguration work as I currently use mbox and I don't have an IMAP > > server running on the machine where the E-Mails initially get > > delivered. > > > > So I just need to decide which of many possible routes will serve me > > best. > > If we all misunderstood and you have multiple instances of mutt running and > want to be able to access your mail from any of them then use POP and leave > the email on the server. Are you forced to use IMAP? > I currently read my E-Mails (at different times, not simultaneously) using mutt on:-
The desktop Linux system which is also where Postfix runs to receive my E-Mail. My laptop running Linux, sometimes on the LAN with the above desktop, sometimes out and about connected by someone's home WiFi or a 3G connection. Rarely, but occasionally, on someone else's system. The reason I'd use IMAP rather than POP3 is that I have mail filtering running on the desktop server. There's a custom script that delivers mailing list E-Mails (in particular) to separate mailboxes. I want to be able to see these when I read my E-Mail remotely. Thus I'd simply do everything remotely using IMAP, not store anything on the laptop. -- Chris Green