Bonjour Philippe!
Content de te voir la binette! :)
(Je suis revenu à Pegasus, pour ton info.)
I agree the actual setup is actual confusing.
I have an Internet Options menu under Tools, and a Network Configuration menu under File
Both show the same thing. (possibly because I'm only using POP3?)
In that case, one of these menus could be disabled, as it's redundant.
Could it make sense if David was making two varieties of PM available: one for Mercury users, and one for POP3 users, which is the widest audience on the Net.
Maybe with simple compilation switches he could make these variants.
I've been using PM for years, back from the 2.x series, but have used other clients too, like The Bat!, Thunderbird.
PM is a great program, but somewhat ackward to configure and use for a novice.
It's folder architecture is a bit strange too.
People are looking for a specific folder for the outgoing message queue, and the sent ones.
Actually, PM puts the message in the sent folder, even if it has not been actually sent.
It's design is not the most intuitive for POP3 users.
The ability to re-order the folders and the columns would be great too.
The truncation of the From and Subject fields in the message list is strange too.
With the power of the average desktop nowadays, the reasons behind many "features" need to be reconsidered to make PM more attractive and modern.
Just my $0.02!.
Best regards,
François
<p>Bonjour Philippe!
Content de te voir la binette! :)
</p><p>(Je suis revenu à Pegasus, pour ton info.)&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>I agree the actual setup is actual confusing.</p><p>I have an Internet Options menu under Tools, and a Network Configuration menu under File</p><p>Both show the same thing. (possibly because I'm only using POP3?)</p><p>In that case, one of these menus could be disabled, as it's redundant.</p><p>Could it make sense if David was making two varieties of PM available: one for Mercury users, and one for POP3 users, which is the widest audience on the Net.</p><p>Maybe with simple compilation switches he could make these variants.</p><p>I've been using PM for years, back from the 2.x series, but have used other clients too, like The Bat!, Thunderbird.</p><p>PM is a great program, but somewhat ackward to configure and use for a novice.</p><p>It's folder architecture is a bit strange too.</p><p>People are looking for a specific folder for the outgoing message queue, and the sent ones.</p><p>Actually, PM puts the message in the sent folder, even if it has not been actually sent.</p><p>It's design is not the most intuitive for POP3 users.</p><p>The ability to re-order the folders and the columns would be great too.</p><p>The truncation of the From and Subject fields in the message list is strange too.</p><p>With the power of the average desktop nowadays, the reasons behind many "features" need to be reconsidered to make PM more attractive and modern.</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Just my $0.02!.</p><p>Best regards,</p><p>François</p><p>&nbsp;</p>