Sorry if this isn't totally new. As earlier threads on this topic evolve, I understand less and less.
I am a stand alone user. I've been using Pegasus for personal email for almost 20 years. Over the years I've upgraded my Pegasus version. I have also installed Pegagus on all the computers I've used. I use Desktop Pro as my Windows Explorer interface. With each move and upgrade I've copied my mailbox files to the new environment without even a hiccup.
I am now using Pegasus 4.63 on an aging Dell XPS laptop running on XP. In May I bought a Samsung Win 7 laptop which I ultimately returned for reasons having nothing to do with Pegasus. I followed the same steps I'd always followed when moving to a new computer (installing Pegasus and copying all the files under Pmail/Mail, including the config files, to Pmail/Mail), but while Pegasus loaded on the Win 7 computer, it did not show any a awareness of my mail. There are thousands of old emails. Loss of my old emails is beyond my ability to describe.
I recently bought a new Win 7 computer. I have learned from this forum that you can't install Pmail in C:/Program Files on a Win 7 computer. So, let's assume I install Pmail as C:/Pmail on the Win 7 computer. Let's also assume I create a mailbox on the Windows 7 machine with the same settings as are on my XP mailbox. Logically, to me anyway, I could copy all of the files at C:/Program Files/Pmail/Mail on my XP to C:/Pmail/Mail, OTHER THAN THE CONFIGURATION FILES, on the Win 7 computer. If that's right, which are the configuration files I shouldn't copy from the XP computer to the Win 7 computer.
In the alternative, since I have a full backup of Pmail, I could uninstall Pmail from my XP and reinstall it at C:/Pmail and configure a new mailbox, as I would as described in the prior paragraph. I would then copy my backup of C:/Program Files/Pmail/Mail, OTHER THAN THE CONFIGURATION FILES, to C:/Pmail/Mail on my XP. The last step would be to copy the files at C:/Pmail/Mail on the XP to C:/Pmail/Mail on the Win 7 computer.
Does any of that make sense? Do you have a recommendation on what to do?
Sorry for too many words.
Barry Levinsky
<p>Sorry if this isn't totally new. As earlier threads on this topic evolve, I understand less and less.</p><p>I am a stand alone user. I've been using Pegasus for personal email for almost 20 years. Over the years I've upgraded my Pegasus version. I have also installed Pegagus on all the computers I've used. I use Desktop Pro as my Windows Explorer interface. With each move and upgrade I've copied my mailbox files to the new environment without even a hiccup.</p><p>&nbsp;I am now using Pegasus 4.63 on an aging Dell XPS laptop running on XP. In May I bought a Samsung Win 7 laptop which I ultimately returned for reasons having nothing to do with Pegasus. I followed the same steps I'd always followed when moving to a new computer (installing Pegasus and copying all the files under Pmail/Mail, including the config files, to Pmail/Mail), but while Pegasus loaded on the Win 7 computer, it did not show any a awareness of my mail. There are thousands of old emails. Loss of my old emails is beyond my ability to describe.</p><p>I recently bought a new Win 7 computer. I have learned from this forum that you can't install Pmail in C:/Program Files on a Win 7 computer. So, let's assume I install Pmail as C:/Pmail on the Win 7 computer. Let's also assume I create a mailbox on the Windows 7 machine with the same settings as are on my XP mailbox. Logically, to me anyway, I could copy all of the files at C:/Program Files/Pmail/Mail on my XP to C:/Pmail/Mail, OTHER THAN THE CONFIGURATION FILES, on the Win 7 computer. If that's right, which are the configuration files I shouldn't copy from the XP computer to the Win 7 computer.</p><p>In the alternative, since I have a full backup of Pmail, I could uninstall Pmail from my XP and reinstall it at C:/Pmail and configure a new mailbox, as I would as described in the prior paragraph. I would then copy my backup of C:/Program Files/Pmail/Mail, OTHER THAN THE CONFIGURATION FILES, to C:/Pmail/Mail on my XP. The last step would be to copy the files at C:/Pmail/Mail on the XP to C:/Pmail/Mail on the Win 7 computer.</p><p>&nbsp;Does any of that make sense? Do you have a recommendation on what to do?</p><p>Sorry for too many words.</p><p>&nbsp;Barry Levinsky</p><p></p><p>&nbsp;</p><p></p>