Under Tools | options | Incoming Mail | Folder Behaviours there is a check box setting (second last) to delete from linked folder when deleted from search.
The difference between the 5 hour GMT difference and the 4 hours on your e-mails may be due to a Daylight Saving setting. I think there was a recent Windows Update which corrected some daylight saving issues.
If I were you I would double-check your PC's timezone, daylight saving setting and the actual time-of day. Then, I would check that Pegasus is correctly set to pick up the right timezone too. That option is found in the Pegasus options, on the 'Advanced settings' page. Just tick the 'Auto' box. If you still see problems, try entering -0500 instead.
As for resetting all your folders to apply timezone correction, yes, I think you'll have to do them manually. Don't start unless you definitely can't fix the problem with the above ideas first!
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Pegasus handles the 'summer time' change based on the CURRENT DATE, not the date that the email was sent, This means that any email sent during the 'winter time' period will have its displayed time offset by one hour during the 'summer' months. The opposite presumably happens for 'summer' mail viewed during 'winter' months.
This shouldn't be a difficult fix for the developers to make. Perhaps in Pegasus 4.6 or 5.0 perhaps?
Yes, that list. There's also an option (in the 'Messages and replies' section) that lets you turn off all autocompletion from the recently-used list if that suits you better.
> My problem is when clicking any hyperlink received in an email message Firefox (my default browser) > crashes and then returns this Firefox Message: (Firefox has encountered a problem and has to close).
What have you selected in Tools | Options | Hyperlinks? If you have selected "Use URLPROXY.EXE" this program could be causing the crash.
Oh dear. Can you let us know what you were hoping to find? You never know - maybe that can be put into a future version! Perhaps it's already there but too well hidden! Any feedback can be helpful.
OK, I found it: C:\Program Files\Pmail\MAIL\ADMIN I pasted my old CNM
files there and they appeared in my inbox. So, my best strategy is to
empty my inbox before I do my BackUp; otherwise I risk loosing some
mail. Is there any reason I might want to include Admin in my BackUp?
Thanks again.
Probably it's best to close the program (actually all programs) before doing a backup. You really need to include the ADMIN directory in your backups as well so that you have a copy of all your mail.
1) I don't think so - the error msg distinctly shows up after I've done something with/in a folder (and also shows up after I've composed a new email and hit 'send').
anyway, just to be safe, I've gone ahead and reindexed ALL my folders just now.
2) yes, installed locally. however, I've since discovered that the lag shows up not just in pegasus, but across any & all(?) of my apps.
You probably should have posted this in the Pegasus forum, not the Mercury forum, but no matter.
There are a couple of options available to you. When you create a new folder in Pegasus, you can choose to create a 'Unix Mailbox Folder'. If you do this and transfer your messages into that folder, you can later have Thunderbird import that Unix-style folder directly.
Alternatively, I've found in the past that saving an individual message as a .txt file (right-click and choose Save message data to file) but then changing the filetype to .eml makes that message readable by any of the main clients.
If the top of the column was changed to To instead of From then the normal messages that are showing the From address would be wrong and you could not tell from the message entry. One way or the other the column headers is going to be wrong unless you never put a copy to self in another folder or a regular message in a copy to self folder.
The solution of adding the To: to the address in the From column was the only rational solution.
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What we have now is a perfectly acceptable solution given the fixed nature of the columns in a message list (and is a quirk that I actually quite like), but a future version of Pegasus badly needs to include the ability to customise which columns are on display as well as show the full details (truncated subject lines?). This may perhaps be included as part of the current re-write of the foldering system, I don't know.
As I said, personally I enjoy the "To:" prefix, but I do wish that I could add other columns to the view and I definitely think that it's a reasonable expectation of users.
I'm not sure the ultimate solution for this. I'm going to chalk it up to trying to run pmail in a non-standard environment.
What I found as a workaround was to use the option to cascade my windows in pmail and I could then get the folder to reappear. It will still disappear again at some point in my usage but that's a good enough workaround for me.
> Since yesterday, I have a real strange problem. > > All filing trays are no more visible. > > Instead I have all folders (~1000) in the tree. > > May there is there a hidden settings I have changed? > > Thanx for hints or solution :-)
You have lost you hierarch.pm file. Exit Pegasus Mail, restore it from backup to replace the hierarch.pm in your home mail directory. When you run Pegasus Mail you will find most of the folder/tray structure is restored.
[quote user="Schoolio"]I would really appreciate a helpful and fast reply for this problem (and hope that what I tried to explain here was understandable!)[/quote]
If you don't feel familiar with English there's a as well.
It's most probably an access rights issue, but it's rather hard guessing if you don't provide any details on what exactly doesn't work? You may need to put the main mailbox directory in a place where it can be accessed by all users, on Windows 7 (don't know about Vista) "Öffentliche Dokumente" ([X]:\Users\Public\Documents) could be a proper place.
It's New Year's Day January 1, 2014 and I woke up with the same mystery "bad omen." Thank you so much for the great help. Now my "bad omen" is vanquished.. Yay!