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Date:      Mon, 6 Oct 1997 12:01:14 -0700 (PDT)
From:      Dean Gaudet <dgaudet-list-freebsd-mobile@arctic.org>
To:        Mike Smith <mike@smith.net.au>
Cc:        John Polstra <jdp@polstra.com>, freebsd-mobile@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: Seamless nomadic e-mail access 
Message-ID:  <Pine.LNX.3.95dg3.971006115546.17869A-100000@twinlark.arctic.org>
In-Reply-To: <199710061107.UAA01562@word.smith.net.au>

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On Mon, 6 Oct 1997, Mike Smith wrote:

> This is exactly what you were describing above.  You specifically 
> claim that you avoid taking your mail with you by leaving it on an 
> "internet accessible" server.  Hotmail is "internet accessible", and in 
> fact is *more* accessible than you propose because you can access it 
> with any browser, rather than requring some nonexistent client software.

I can still read mail on my server or on my laptop.  On the server I can
use whatever client suits me.  i.e. telnet and pine. 

> Given that I have been advocating a specific form of "disconnected mail 
> reading", I would have to say that I have a pretty damn good idea of 
> what it's all about. 8)

Your disconnected mail reading has no method of synchronizing your actions
on your laptop copy of your mailbox with your server.  This is essential
to me, as I have no desire to read the same messages twice on all the
mailing lists I read.  I also like to have the "replied" annotations
attached to mail I have replied to.

> >  What is needed here is both
> > the ability to read mail from anywhere while online, and the ability to
> > read and manipulate cached subset of your mail while offline.  Go read
> > about IMAP 4 disconnected mode if you haven't yet.
> 
> I'll read about it in the feature set of a mailer, if and when it's 
> implemented.  Until then, a vapourware standard is of no use to me.

There are clients, just not for FreeBSD, or Linux.  See www.imap.org. 

Dean




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