[quote user="mcduff"]
I downloaded and installed Mercury, but before spending lots of time, maybe I should clarify our set-up.
For example, our czechfriends dot org has several different emails, four of those stored and answered by me in separate accounts: clients, general public, private and one address acting as "spam catch" redirected by the spamassasin filter on the individual email addresses.
Our Czech non-profit ekomuzeum dot cz has 13 emails, 8 of them handled by me: clients, general public, private, project, courses, etc and finally again one address acting as "spam catch".
Of those 14 email addresses, at least 5 of them have heavy traffic and get checked 2 to 5 times per day. Their mailboxes range from having 6 folders (around 50 mb in files) up to 20 different mail folders (still almost 500 Mb after archiving a lot of older files). The rest gets less often checked, from once a day to once every few days.
As said, the set-up works OK, the only annoyance is every time going through the different steps to change users.
From your description of Mercury, I did not get the feeling I would have less steps to perform to go to the different mailboxes, or am I wrong here?
[/quote]
MercuryD will be downloading and sending all the mail for all the accounts on a regular basis so that when you go to an account there is not need to do anything other then to read the mail and process it. You can still use the change users but just the change will be all that is required to actually read the mail. I personally though use the add mailbox to list and keep all of the mailboxes open in a single instance of WinPMail. Now I do not have 13 added mailboxes but I do currently have 8 added user mailboxes and 2 IMAP4 accounts.
[quote user="mcduff"]<p>I downloaded and installed Mercury, but before spending lots of time, maybe I should clarify our set-up.</p><p>For example, our czechfriends dot org has several different emails, four of those stored and answered by me in separate accounts: clients, general public, private and one address acting as "spam catch" redirected by the spamassasin filter on the individual email addresses.&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;Our Czech non-profit ekomuzeum dot cz&nbsp; has 13 emails, 8 of them handled by me: clients, general public, private, project, courses, etc and finally again one address acting as "spam catch". </p><p>Of those 14 email addresses, at least 5 of them have heavy traffic and get checked 2 to 5 times per day. Their mailboxes range from having 6 folders (around 50 mb in files) up to 20 different mail folders (still almost 500 Mb after archiving a lot of older files). The rest gets less often checked, from once a day to once every few days.
</p><p>As said, the set-up works OK, the only annoyance is every time going through the different steps to change users.</p><p>From your description of Mercury, I did not get the feeling I would have less steps to perform to go to the different mailboxes, or am I wrong here?&nbsp;&nbsp; &nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>[/quote]</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>MercuryD will be downloading and sending all the mail for all the accounts on a regular basis so that when you go to an account there is not need to do anything other then to read the mail and process it. &nbsp; You can still use the change users but just the change will be all that is required to actually read the mail.&nbsp; I personally though use the add mailbox to list and keep all of the mailboxes open in a single instance of WinPMail.&nbsp; Now I do not have 13 added mailboxes but I do currently have 8 added user mailboxes and 2 IMAP4 accounts.</p><p>&nbsp;</p>