I'd suggest switching from POP to IMAP. Really IMAP comes into its own when you have multiple machines accessing the same account. While with a POP account, your mail is downloaded to the local machine, with IMAP the mail lives on the server. So it's always the same wherever you are. (Of course, if your mailbox allowance at your service provider is getting filled, you can create a local mailbox and copy older mail to there on one or more machine, then delete it off the server.)
http://www.imap.org/imap.vs.pop.html
Likewise, wherever you log on, you should see the same message flags: seen, answered, flagged, deleted, draft, recent. In the future it's likely that mail clients will implement user-defined IMAP keywords that can be set on the server and read in any mail client, too:
http://deflexion.com/2006/05/server-side-message-labels
In short, I'd say server-side is the way to go with mail.
Obviously, paid accounts offer more, but there are even free IMAP accounts to be had: fastmail and bluebottle are both IMAP-based services. AOL now offers 2GB of free space that can be accessed over IMAP, too -- and over SSL at that:
http://members.aol.com/adamkb/aol/mailfaq/imap/
<p>I'd suggest switching from POP to IMAP. Really IMAP comes into its own when you have multiple machines accessing the same account. While with a POP account, your mail is downloaded to the local machine, with IMAP the mail lives on the server. So it's always the same wherever you are. (Of course, if your mailbox allowance at your service provider is getting filled, you can create a local mailbox and copy older mail to there on one or more machine, then delete it off the server.)</p><p> </p><p>http://www.imap.org/imap.vs.pop.html </p><p> </p><p>Likewise, wherever you log on, you should see the same message flags: seen, answered, flagged, deleted, draft, recent. In the future it's likely that mail clients will implement user-defined IMAP keywords that can be set on the server and read in any mail client, too:</p><p> </p><p>http://deflexion.com/2006/05/server-side-message-labels</p><p> </p><p>In short, I'd say server-side is the way to go with mail.</p><p> </p><p>Obviously, paid accounts offer more, but there are even free IMAP accounts to be had: fastmail and bluebottle are both IMAP-based services. AOL now offers 2GB of free space that can be accessed over IMAP, too -- and over SSL at that:</p><p> </p><p>http://members.aol.com/adamkb/aol/mailfaq/imap/</p><p>
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