On 08/21/15 07:06, jd1008 wrote:
>
> A friend came to me asking for help I was not able to
> figure out.
>
> He has multiple laptops, at different geographical locations.
> On all of them, he uses fedora and TB.
>
> What he has bot been able to achieve is that all laptops
> download the same messages from gmail.
>
> But what happens is that if laptop A downloads all
> latest messages. Then if he logs off, and 2 days later,
> he logs in on laptop B and tried to download all messages,
> he only gets the ones that come in AFTER the ones he
> downloaded on laptop A.
>
> How can he config TB to always download messages that have
> not been downloaded?
>
> Or is it an issue with the gmail server itself?
>
> I have seen a solution that advises the use of IMAP instead
> of pop3.
>
> But that is not what he wants, because sometimes he does not have
> access to the web, and would still like to read messages he has
> not read yet, so he needs them to be on the laptops.
>
> Perhaps it cannot be done???
>

The better solution for your friend is to switch to IMAP as IMAP has been 
designed from the start to work with multiple clients.

If you watch the T-Bird processes on multiple clients using POP you'll notice 
that the status reported on some will be "There are no NEW message" while one 
client will get a message.  This is because the server has no way to determine 
which of the multiple clients has downloaded a message so when a message is 
downloaded by any client it is no longer marked as "NEW" on the server. 

If you want to get all of the messages on to a given client you have to go to 
the gmail settings for POP3 and check the box for "Enable POP for all mail 
(even mail that's already been downloaded".  But be advised that this is a "one 
shot" setting and the next client that connects to download will get all the 
messages on the server BUT the setting will be cleared.  You'd have to do this 
over and over again for all you clients.

So...just move to IMAP is the real answer.
 

-- 
It seems most people that say they are "done talking about it" never really are 
until given the last word.
-- 
users mailing list
users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users
Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct
Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines
Have a question? Ask away: http://ask.fedoraproject.org

Reply via email to