Locate the created files in Windows Explorer. Rename the filetypes to CNM. Copy these newly renamed files into your NewMail directory. To find the NewMail directory, inside your Pegasus Mail click on Help. Then click the "About..." menu item, and then the "Info" button.
There probably were angle bracket but the content that was provided with the failed delivery messages sent to postmaster only showed From: firstname,lastname@domain.com.
This user has come back into the office so I have since discovered that the failures were on messages that she was trying to forward. The hotmail address was in the cc list. She doesn't remember whether she was bouncing or forwarding with edits but says messages sent directly to the hotmail address go fine. That's all I need to know. No need to dig into this any further at this time.
Consider SNOWY the server and SATCHEL the client. Make no changes to SNOWY, just run pconfig on SATCHEL to point to the mailboxes on SNOWY. Test the path to the \MAIL directory on SNOWY from SATCHEL using Windows Explorer to confirm you are using a valid path in pconfig. Make sure you have full control permission to \MAIL (including subfolders) from SATCHEL.
Alternatively, there is no need to run the Pegasus Mail installed on SATCHEL because you can share the installation that is on SNOWY. A shortcut to winpm-32.exe on SNOWY from SATCHEL is how you do it.
A few additional points:
1) You don't need your wife to exit Pegasus Mail when you want to use it. Pegasus Mail can handle being run by multiple users. It is the act of accessing the same mailbox simultaneously by multiple users that must be avoided.
2) There is an executable in the Pegasus Mail executables folder named wssetup.exe (stands for WorkStationSetup). Running this makes the registry entries and other system changes needed for a PC to run a Pegasus Mail installation that resides on another machine. You won't need to do this because you have already had Pegasus Mail installed on SATCHEL but this is important for anyone else considering doing this.
3) Be very careful when opening pmail.cfg with an editor. It is one of the few configuration files in Pegasus Mail that can be easily broken by manual editing. An inadvertant extra space or space deletion is all it takes.
Thank you for information .I managed tofixthe issue.Copiedoverall the informationfrom theold to the newmailbox and Pegasustellsme thatit is runningversion4.63 :-)
IMHO a worker should not be using his/her account to send out mass mailings. If nothing else it will damage the reputation of the company and risk labelling it as a spammer. Possible solutions may include setting up distribution lists with less than 100 recipients, or using the Pegasus Mail Mailmerge utility, see Pegasus Mail help under topic "Mail merge" Mail Merge can be found when composing a message under the "Merge" tab.
Be aware that some ISPs will limit the number of mail messages that may be sent in a period of time.
Have been using Pegasus with both Fastmail <http://www.fastmail.fm> and GMX <http://www.gmx.com> via IMAP for years no problems. Mailstore on both IMAP servers is over 15k items each.
GMX is a bit hard to find the configuration for standalone clients but can be done.
Do not like web mail screens and Pegasus handles IMAP much better than other clients (Mulberry / Alpine are IMAP champs - no html rendering).
if you search the forum there are a number of Yahoo issues raised and answered.
It doesn't matter in which folder the copy to self is ... Pegasus shows the recipient due to the special format of his copy to self. For me it works in every IMAP-Folder. Have a look at the raw text.
If you generate a outgoing copy with another mailreader on same IMAP-Mailbox, that mailreader will generate a simple copy of that mail in SENT. For Pegasus this is a normal mail - no copy to self.
Note: Copy to Self with Pegasus is not the same as Outgoing Copy with any other mailreader.
Wrong guesswork above re M & T lines. Further experimentation suggests that the M line is generated when the Message is queued for delivery (if that's what you've configured the SMTP definition to do), and the T line is generated when you send the queued mail.
actually you CAN make it work in program files if you want to by editing the directory permissions. It is though simpler to just install in c:\PMail but again DO check the directory permissions for PMail and sub folders and windows 7 has a habit of not giving you full access to folders that you created in the first place.
This is ironically especially a problem with new folders created in the Program Data directory structure which was I thought supposed to be for programs to save data to....
[quote user="Mottel"] I've found that Pegasus can have concurrent IMAP connections open to two servers, and copy emails from, say, a Yahoo mail acct to a Gmail account by copying them from one IMAP folder to the other in Pegasus. [...] I'd like to know: is that date going directly from remote server a to remote server b, or is it going via my computer, so that (if the latter is true) I'm really downloading and then uploading each item? [/quote]
[quote user="Theresa"]Does anyone have a solution for me?[/quote]
It's very likely that the folder opens somewhere outside of the visible screen: Try via Pegasus Mail's menu bar Window => Cascade to reposition all open windows (after opening the new mail folder) in a distinct order from where you can restore their sizes and positions according to your personal preferences.
Pegasus Mail might be minimizing to the Notification area. Win7 hides icons in the Notification area so click the "Show Hidden Icons" triangle and see if the Pegasus Mail icon is there when it it minimized.
You might want it to minimize to the taskbar instead. If so, go to Tools > User interface > Reporting/logging and unselect the "Hide the Pegasus Mail taskbar entry when minimized" option.