I don't think it is as hard as you are expecting it to be. It's just different. Plenty of us pull from multiple POP3 mailboxes. I think the keys are to use the commandline switch to start as the identity you use most, filter message from each POP3 mailbox to a specific folder, and associate an identity with each of those folders if needed. After that, each time you reply you just look at the identity selector to confirm you are sending as the correct identity. Similar in process to selecting from a pull down menu. It won't take long before that Default identity becomes invisible (you get so used to seeing it but not using it that you eventually stop seeing it).
As for multiple users, from what you have said I don't believe multiple users would be of any benefit because you want flexibility in who you send as. That would require multiple identities inside of each user configuration.
FWIW, at the office I am two users, one with 12 identities that pulls from 4 POP3 accounts (Mercury handles the pulling there). At home I have 5 identities and pull from 3 POP3
accounts.
Pegasus Mail is extremely flexible. A single install can be run by multiple PCs on the LAN or as multiple instances on the same PC (think multiple Pegasus Mail users). Alternatively, Pegasus Mail could be installed on each PCs on the LAN but share the same mail store, something you made reference to. Pegasus Mail protects data by creating a lock
file that causes a warning to be displayed if an attempt to access a locked mailbox is made by another instance. Some Pegasus Mail capabilities that come to mind are multiple users, multiple identities, multiple POP3 hosts, multiple SMTP hosts, extensive filtering, selective downloading, IMAP, autoreplies, signatures, glossary entries, message templates. There are plenty more.
<p>I don't think it is as hard as you are expecting it to be.&nbsp; It's just different.&nbsp; Plenty of us pull from multiple POP3 mailboxes.&nbsp; I think the keys are to use the commandline switch to start as the identity you use most, filter message from each POP3 mailbox to a specific folder, and associate an identity with each of those folders if needed.&nbsp; After that, each time you reply you just look at the identity selector to confirm you are sending as the correct identity.&nbsp; Similar in process to selecting from a pull down menu.&nbsp; It won't take long before that Default identity becomes invisible (you get so used to seeing it but not using it that you eventually stop seeing it).</p><p>As for multiple users, from what you have said I don't believe multiple users would be of any benefit because you want flexibility in who you send as.&nbsp; That would require multiple identities inside of each user configuration.</p><p>FWIW, at the office I am two users, one with 12 identities that pulls from 4 POP3 accounts (Mercury handles the pulling there).&nbsp; At home I have 5 identities and pull from 3 POP3
accounts.&nbsp;
</p><p>Pegasus Mail is extremely flexible.&nbsp; A single install can be run by multiple PCs on the LAN or as multiple instances on the same PC (think multiple Pegasus Mail users).&nbsp; Alternatively, Pegasus Mail could be installed on each PCs on the LAN but share the same mail store, something you made reference to.&nbsp;&nbsp;Pegasus Mail protects data by creating a lock
file that causes a warning to be displayed if an attempt to access a locked mailbox is made by another instance.&nbsp; Some Pegasus Mail capabilities that come to mind are multiple users, multiple identities, multiple POP3 hosts, multiple SMTP hosts, extensive filtering, selective downloading, IMAP, autoreplies, signatures, glossary entries, message templates.&nbsp; There are plenty more.
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