Hello!
As far as your second problem is concerned, I think this may be solved easily (well, I hope so). Go to "Tools" | "Options" | "Incoming mail" | "Hyperlinks" and press the button "System mailer".
This is what the help says about that option: Normally when you install Pegasus Mail, the installation process will inform Windows that Pegasus Mail should be used as your default system mailer (the mail program that will be invoked whenever you click a "Mailto" link in a web page). If this setting is lost (perhaps because another mail program overwrites it) you can always re-establish it by clicking the System mailer button in the the Default system mail program group on this preferences page. Does that help?
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Some other thoughts:
(a) If you want to start a certain user-account defined in Pegasus Mail, you simply add the respective commandline option to the commandline that you usually use to start Pegasus Mail. For example, if the user "example1" is to be started, the commandline may look like c:\pmail\winpm-32.exe -i example1 -id private. Obviously, you have to adapt it to the path of the directory in which "winpm-32.exe" is placed.
The switch -i example1 makes Pegasus Mail start with user "example1". The switch "-id private" opens the identity "private" (in user "example1"); this is useful if you have defined several identites in Pegasus Mail and want to start a certain identity automatically when opening Pegasus Mail.
(b) If you want to merge two users, you cannot do so automatically, but you can manually. The main problem is how to transfer the e-mail messages from one user to the other.
An example: you have users "admin" and "example1", and you want to transfer example1's messages to admin's account. Open user admin, and go to "Folders" | "Add mailbox to list" - enter the username whose messages you want to transfer (do not forget to choose "Username") and a descriptive name, something like "example1's messages". Having pressed "OK", you see that admin's folder list now lists a mailbox entry named "example1's messages" as well, containing all of example1's folders. You do not see the whole folder structure (the trays are missing), but you see all folders listed there.
You can copy messages from example's folders to admin's folders. Of course, you can add some new folders to user admin before copying.
(c) Do you have any addressbooks, distribution lists or other files that you want to transfer from one user to another one? You can move the respective files outside of Pegasus Mail from one user's mailbox directory to the other user's mailbox directory.
You find the mailbox directory in "Help" | "About Pegasus Mail" | "Info" where you find an entry about "Home mailbox location". This is the mailbox directory I have just mentioned. Given that you have a more or less usual Pegasus Mail installation, the "Home mailbox location" also contains one user's addressbooks (an addressbook consists of both a *.pmr- and a *.pm!-file), distribution lists (a distribution list is a *.pml-file), templates (pm5- and pm6-files).
If you follow that advice, do so when Pegasus Mail is not running.
******
I hope this helps. If you have any more questions, just ask again.
<p>&nbsp;</p><p>Hello!</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>As far as your second problem is concerned, I think this may be solved easily (well, I hope so). Go to "Tools" | "Options" | "Incoming mail" | "Hyperlinks" and press the button "System mailer".
This is what the help says about that option: [i]Normally when you install Pegasus Mail, the installation process will inform Windows that Pegasus Mail should be used as your default system mailer (the mail program that will be invoked whenever you click a "Mailto" link in a web page). If this setting is lost (perhaps because another mail program overwrites it) you can always re-establish it by clicking the System mailer button in the the Default system mail program group on this preferences page.[/i] Does that help?
</p><p>******&nbsp;</p><p>Some other thoughts:
(a) If you want to start a certain user-account defined in Pegasus Mail, you simply add the respective commandline option to the commandline that you usually use to start Pegasus Mail. For example, if the user "example1" is to be started, the commandline may look like [i]c:\pmail\winpm-32.exe -i example1 -id private[/i]. Obviously, you have to adapt it to the path of the directory in which "winpm-32.exe" is placed.
The switch [i]-i example1[/i] makes Pegasus Mail start with user "example1". The switch "-id private" opens the identity "private" (in user "example1"); this is useful if you have defined several identites in Pegasus Mail and want to start a certain identity automatically when opening Pegasus Mail.</p><p>(b) If you want to merge two users, you cannot do so automatically, but you can manually. The main problem is how to transfer the e-mail messages from one user to the other.
An example: you have users "admin" and "example1", and you want to transfer example1's messages to admin's account. Open user admin, and go to "Folders" | "Add mailbox to list" - enter the username whose messages you want to transfer (do not forget to choose "Username") and a descriptive name, something like "example1's messages". Having pressed "OK", you see that admin's folder list now lists a mailbox entry named "example1's messages" as well, containing all of example1's folders. You do not see the whole folder structure (the trays are missing), but you see all folders listed there.
You can copy messages from example's folders to admin's folders. Of course, you can add some new folders to user admin before copying.</p><p>(c) Do you have any addressbooks, distribution lists or other files that you want to transfer from one user to another one? You can move the respective files outside of Pegasus Mail from one user's mailbox directory to the other user's mailbox directory.
You find the mailbox directory in "Help" | "About Pegasus Mail" | "Info" where you find an entry about "Home mailbox location". This is the mailbox directory I have just mentioned. Given that you have a more or less usual Pegasus Mail installation, the "Home mailbox location" also contains one user's addressbooks (an addressbook consists of both a *.pmr- and a *.pm!-file), distribution lists (a distribution list is a *.pml-file), templates (pm5- and pm6-files).
If you follow that advice, do so when Pegasus Mail is [i]not[/i] running.
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******</p><p>I hope this helps. If you have any more questions, just ask again.</p><p>
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