[quote user="Thomas R. Stephenson"]
To increase the speed of step 1 I moved the program to my hard drive first.
The
empty original folder still consists this data error after step 2. Now
I would blindly go to step 4 if the original folders name was not
Main.pmm. Is this fact insignificant and will I proceed the next 12
years without Main.pmm? Or can I simply rename the filename of the new
folder to Main.pmm?
Not that big a deal anymore. It is one of the unique folders though and renaming the PMM and PMI files might make it easier for you to work with the folders. I keep an older version of PMail around that will enable me to rename the file. ;-)
After more than 12 years of updating
versions, I'm afraid I already have a quite untypical and maybe messy
setup (i.e. no 'Program' folder I keep reading about on this forum). So
I'm a little sensitive about this kind of changes. In fact my next
topic on this forum was going to be how I can install a clean version
4.52 and later add my settings and data to this new install instead of
installing over the old version.
I personally believe this is a waste of time. I've had PMail installed in the c"\pmail directory since I was running PMail for MSDOS in the early 90's. I have never done anything but install the new version over the old. When I updated the computer I just copied from the old hard drives and actually never do a new install except for testing. ;-) I also have PMail 3.5x, WinPMail v2.5x, 3.x, 4.41 and v4.5 all pointing at the same mailbox directories so I can test out and support older versions as well. I do use the -Y <filename> commandline option so that older WinPMail versions do not mess up my v4.5 PMail.ini. ;-)
[/quote]
Ok, it was hard for me but I did it. Main folder is gone... Maybe I will even install 4.52 over this version... Again... ;)
Thanks for solving the issue!
Casa
[quote user="Thomas R. Stephenson"]<BLOCKQUOTE><P>To increase the speed of step 1 I moved the program to my hard drive first.</P><P>The
empty original folder still consists this data error after step 2. Now
I would blindly go to step 4 if the original folders name was not
Main.pmm. Is this fact insignificant and will I proceed the next 12
years without Main.pmm? Or can I simply rename the filename of the new
folder to Main.pmm?</P></BLOCKQUOTE><P>Not that big a deal anymore. It is one of the unique folders though and renaming the PMM and PMI files might make it easier for you to work with the folders. I keep an older version of PMail around that will enable me to rename the file. ;-)
</P><BLOCKQUOTE><P>After more than 12 years of updating
versions, I'm afraid I already have a quite untypical and maybe messy
setup (i.e. no 'Program' folder I keep reading about on this forum). So
I'm a little sensitive about this kind of changes. In fact my next
topic on this forum was going to be how I can install a clean version
4.52 and later add my settings and data to this new install instead of
installing over the old version.</P></BLOCKQUOTE><P>I personally believe this is a waste of time. I've had PMail installed in the c"\pmail directory since I was running PMail for MSDOS in the early 90's. I have never done anything but install the new version over the old. When I updated the computer I just copied from the old hard drives and actually never do a new install except for testing. ;-) I also have PMail 3.5x, WinPMail v2.5x, 3.x, 4.41 and v4.5 all pointing at the same mailbox directories so I can test out and support older versions as well. I do use the -Y &lt;filename&gt; commandline option so that older WinPMail versions do not mess up my v4.5 PMail.ini. ;-)
</P><P>[/quote]</P><P>Ok, it was hard for me but I did it. Main folder is gone... Maybe I will even install 4.52 over this version... Again... ;)</P><P>Thanks for solving the issue!</P><P>Casa</P>