Community Discussions and Support

The perfect forum for discussions or technical questions about Pegasus Mail.

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Sharkfin posted Dec 27 '09 at 7:18 pm

I'm just throwing a few ideas in here because there's not much info there and nobody else has responded yet.

"Just about any message" - so not ALL messages then? Can you identify any common features between messages in the two groups (HTML/rich text messages, attachments, size, sender...)?

Alternatively, will it crash on any message given the right circumstances (second message opened in the session, preview mode switched on...)?

Have you checked for disk errors? Perhaps there's a bad sector and corrupted files.

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kalu posted Dec 19 '09 at 5:42 am

Hi Steffan

I converted the pegasus mail addressbook to .csv format and imported to yahoomail

it worked.

Thanks for the guidance

kalu

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Phil posted Dec 23 '09 at 11:12 pm

I don't know what kind of network you have (workgroup or other) but if you have somewhere a dns (it's the case if you have a windows domain) it's easier to link the ip address to a domain name (ie smtp.mydomain.com or pop.mydomain.com), so you have just to declare these names in the pnd files and if one day you need to change their ip address you'll just have to modify your dns entries.

Regards

 

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irelam posted Jun 18 '13 at 6:27 pm

Just one final thing on this thread. Bearhtml printing does have a Preview mode, that is described in the Bear help file.  This will allow you to see what is going to be printed before wasting unnecessary paper etc. To enable preview mode, add a line in Bearhtml.ini that says:  Preview=yes

Martin

(author of Bearhtml) 

 

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Sharkfin posted Dec 19 '09 at 3:19 pm

Perhaps my post on the following thread will explain things to you.

http://community.pmail.com/forums/thread/20846.aspx

Please post again after reading that. We'll be happy to help with any queries or problems you may have.

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Is there anything else I can try?  This office does not have a backup

system for their emails (I know, not real smart).  Should I assume at

this point the emails are lost forever?

You might go through all of the files in the users mail directory that are not known files, i.e. odd extensions and open them with a ASCII editor to see if they look like a folder.   Open a PMM folder data file to see what one looks like, the long folder name will be the first thing in the file.  If you find the file save it with restore.pmm and create a zero byte restore.pmi file as well.  Now when you re-open WinPMail is will find the folder and you can re-index it to recover it.

If you can't find it this way then you might try using one of the various deleted messages recovery utilities on the users home mail directory to recover PMM/PMI type files.  If this does not work it's gone forever.

FWIW, I run Mercury with WinPMail and use a Mercury "always" filter to send a copy of all mail passing through the server (except the spam) to the archive user.  It's fairly easy for the postmaster to do and so all users mail can be recovered.

 

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whiskyfizz posted Dec 18 '09 at 4:52 am

Hi !

I did not find any settings allowing me to exclude Pegasus Mail, its folder or some processes. There must be some sort of interception as you suggest, but at which level and how, only the programmers may identify those. As for me, I have just tested version 3.24 of Sandboxie, and still the problem remains. I have thus decided to uninstall it completely as Pegasus Mail is more vital to me than Sandboxie, but it is not with some sadness that I say farewell to this nice piece of software. I looked around and there is maybe an alternative named "iCore Virtual Accounts" which I hope the flying horse will accept. I will eventually keep you guys posted. If the guy behind Sand boxie finds a cure, I will let you know too.

Cheers !

Whiskyfizz.

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Tom Stein posted Dec 16 '09 at 12:50 am

I just realised that after sending complete .CNM files as attachments, the content does not show in the preview pane of the attachment view but only the email headers are being displayed instead.

In the column "Type" under "Multi-part section" it is declared as unknown. Looking at the raw data the attached file is encoded BASE64. When I sent the attachment I left file type and encoding to be default (Mailer decides).

I would have expected that PM would display its own email file format as an email and display it in the 'usual' cascading way (as that CNM file may have an original message and replies etc)  but there might be a good reason for it that it doesn't ? [:)]

What would be a sensible setting to for the "Content viewers" section to handle .CNM files? For the time being I have configured a text editor to open a CNM file in PM. Is there a smarter way maybe with a preview option?

Thanks


Thomas

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Michael posted Dec 8 '10 at 2:51 pm

[quote user="tombell"]I created the text file Bearhtml.log and saved it to C:\PMAIL\Programs because there is no directory called NewMail that I can find by searching my computer (yes, view hidden files and folders is on)[/quote]

Check (menu item) Help => About Pegasus Mail => Info for the New mailbox location.

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jss1941 posted Dec 30 '09 at 11:36 pm

[quote user="fletch99"]

I recently started using Pegasus 4.51 so I'm just a newbie with the mail client.

 

Windows 7 32bit with a Readyboost USB drive ( if it matters).

The menu line with Open Add Rename Delete List keeps getting turned off and I have to turn it back on ?

[/quote]

Right-click and set the display option to be "text only".  That will be preserved between sessions.

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aderoy posted Dec 14 '09 at 7:43 pm

Could your antivirus be the culprit?

Reason for suggesting, currently 200+ emails a day (pop3 and IMAP accounts) no problems. Tried a new antivirus and everything slowed down to unusable IMHO. Switch back to Avast and happy once again.

 

Pegasus mailstore 125 folders 3.6GB active and 8.2GB in archive folders

WinXP Pro SP3 2GB Ram, DSL - POP3 from ISP and three IMAP accounts (FastMail/Gmail and finally Mercury as local test bed)

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Yes. That's because Internet Explorer is not really a separate program. It's tied into Windows so deeply that settings changed there affect the whole system. This explains its appalling security record and the legal action against Microsoft.

If you can handle Pegasus, you can handle a new browser like Firefox, Opera or Safari, all of which offer better features and safer browsing then Internet Explorer.


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Sharkfin posted Dec 13 '09 at 2:46 am

When I first started with Pegasus it took some experimenting to really get the idea of identities but it's not complicated if explained properly. What you want can't be achieved through the use of identities, though Pegasus can do it.

Let's start at the beginning. When you install Pegasus you are asked whether you want a single or multi-user environment. This is like having a few office colleagues use Pegasus rather than just yourself. Each person would have a login that presents them with their own mail.

Within each user's Pegasus account, it is possible to have multiple identities. Each identity is essentially nothing more than an alternative set of options that you wish to use in certain situations. This is a similar concept to the multiple signatures that Pegasus allows you to have. One identity may have your nickname and personal e-mail address, along with other options such as plain text only messages and no copy-to-self, whilst a second identity has settings that uses HTML mail, your work e-mail address and permanent copy-to-self.

However, identities are not intended to be a way of separating your mail accounts. Instead (and this is kind of subtle and hard to 'get' at first) identities are for assuming another online persona. In the example above, outgoing mail would appear entirely different depending on the identity chosen prior to writing the message. The same message sent from both would appear to come from either your personal address or your work address.

Incoming mail, no matter which server you collect it from or which identity is selected (and different identities can have entirely separate SMTP and POP servers that they communicate with) will always be delivered into the single set of folders that comprise your Pegasus login account. This is because, logically, it is all your e-mail and they are your folders.

How to achieve what you want? Well, you can set up a filter that sends all mail received through a given e-mail address or server to a particular folder. You can set up an alternative Pegasus login account to keep things entirely separate if you so desire.

I'm sure other forum users will drop more ideas here soon enough but I thought it would be useful to explain the whole identities thing. I hope I did OK.

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Isn't that file name indicative of a temporary file such as is created when one views a received attachment? Is it possible that you sent your template out after having attached a file that you had opened from another e-mail and was not saved discretely? I don't know whether or how that might be possible. Maybe I'm talking gibberish [he said helpfully].

I can't imagine that your message was rejected because it had an attachment. Far more likely is that, for some reason, it never went out.

As for preventing attachments to your template-created message, does your template definition specify the inclusion of an attachment? Are you actually using a template or saved stationery?

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I realize that this is an old thread, but the problem still exists in 4.63. The workaround is to set the default for each folder, but the help specifically states "You can also associate an identity with a mailbox entry in the Folder Manager Window: when you do this, the identity will be used for all folders in that mailbox, even ones created after you make the selection." It would be nice if this actually worked.

Steve

 

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