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POP vs IMAP..should be easy but..

DD716TED
Explorer
Explorer
All home home desktop computer email accounts are IMAP to keep in step with my Laptop, phone and shop computer.. Although my wife's email account on the home computer is IMAP she doesn't want anything she deletes on her cell phone email to be deleted on the home computer.. should her phones email account be POP? This IMAP / POP stuff confuses me..
10 REPLIES 10

fj12ryder
Explorer II
Explorer II
One of the options you have is to have the messages deleted from the server when you download them rather than keep them on the server. They'll be available on your computer, but deleted from the remote server. Looks something like "Delete received messages from Server". You have a copy on your machine, but no where else.

As was mentioned you can leave the messages on the server and have them deleted later, when you prefer.
Howard and Peggy

"Don't Panic"

ericosmith
Explorer
Explorer
fj12ryder wrote:
Your email client can also be set to Delete the message from the server when downloaded.


That doesn't sound right to me. Yes, if you delete the email it's deleted from the server, but if using Outlook or something similar it's still available locally.

fj12ryder
Explorer II
Explorer II
Your email client can also be set to Delete the message from the server when downloaded.
Howard and Peggy

"Don't Panic"

bighatnohorse
Explorer II
Explorer II
IMAP: email is left on the server. If you delete an email (using any device) then that email is gone for good.

POP: email is downloaded to the your machine - BUT only that one machine. AND the email is left on the server so that it can be downloaded again by another machine.

Your email client (such as Thunderbird) can be set to leave the POP email on the server forever, or, to delete the email after a set certain period of time.

Warning: if you use POP and leave email on the server without a time limit, AND then use a new machine (such as a laptop) to download emails - it will retrieve all emails left on that server from the beginning of time.

You might like POP if you don't have a firm grasp on it.
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MPW-VA
Explorer
Explorer
On the phone look for a POP option to leave a copy of the emails on the server. This way even if she deletes it on the phone the other devices should still see it. Test before actually working with valuable messages just to be sure it works as intended.
Mark and Cindy

joebedford
Nomad II
Nomad II
Campfire Time wrote:
Unless it's corporate email everything is web based from the user perspective.
Uh, whut? I use Outlook. I hate webmail.

Campfire_Time
Explorer
Explorer
wa8yxm wrote:
I use Web Mail. not need to mess with anything. not stored on laptop or phone.

Also more resistant to malware


Actually, no. Unless it's corporate email everything is web based from the user perspective. If you open something malicious then you will get infected regardless of the type of email system because you are still opening it locally on your device.
Chuck D.
โ€œAdventure is just bad planning.โ€ - Roald Amundsen
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wa8yxm
Explorer III
Explorer III
I use Web Mail. not need to mess with anything. not stored on laptop or phone.

Also more resistant to malware
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wnjj
Explorer II
Explorer II
My experience is with pop3 is that the message downloading (and deleting) is controlled by the client, not the server. So if many clients want to download it they can. Then one of the clients can be set to delete as needed. My smaller ISP still only offers pop3 last I checked and I get mail on my phone and home computer no problem.

IMAP stores the email on the server to be โ€œviewedโ€ on the client. If you delete it, itโ€™s gone. Iโ€™m not sure how a server offering both would handle it but if one client uses pop3 and downloads a email before the user deletes it on the IMAP machine it would probably work fine.

1492
Moderator
Moderator
Generally, POP email protocol was meant to download email from the server to local PC once. Therefore, not all devices may even see the email once it's been downloaded by that one device. Is that what you want?

Whereas, IMAP is designed to see the same email from multiple devices as it syncs and caches from the email server.

You may be able to configure your POP email to keep the original email on the server, but will have to know how to do so?