Mercury's default settings are fine for most standard use. Whenever you add more settings there is a risk it will unnecessarily complicate things. You should pay careful attention to those areas that the installer prompts you to configure, though, like local domains and hostname. There is additional information about that in Mercury help and in the manual.
Any email client can be used to connect to Mercury (as long as it supports POP3 or IMAP of course), so you can use Pegasus, Thunderbird, Outlook Express, Outlook or whatever you are used to. You can have a look in the manual for your client program for how to set it up properly.
I'm not sure why you would need MercuryE if you only use the program locally. MercuryD should be used if you want to collect mail from an external POP3 host.
/Rolf
<p>Mercury's default settings are fine for most standard use. Whenever you add more settings there is a risk it will unnecessarily complicate things. You should pay careful attention to those areas that the installer prompts you to configure, though, like local domains and hostname. There is additional information about that in Mercury help and in the manual.</p><p>Any email client can be used to connect to Mercury (as long as it supports POP3 or IMAP of course), so you can use Pegasus, Thunderbird, Outlook Express, Outlook or whatever you are used to. You can have a look in the manual for your client program for how to set it up properly.</p><p>I'm not sure why you would need MercuryE if you only use the program locally. MercuryD should be used if you want to collect mail from an external POP3 host.</p><p>/Rolf&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>