Yes. Soved it by clicking on the Tools menu, choosing Options, then
clicking on the "Mail Delivery" tab. Under the heading "Mail Account
Options" check the box that says "Send messages immediately when
connected". Click on OK. After that, if you are online, the message
will be sent as soon as you click on the Send button.
Hope this helps.
> I am trying to set my Outlook for use with Gmail, e.g., when I try to
> send or ask MrModem a question, his address always goes to Outlook,
> but it seems than any message I send to his web site goes to Outlook
> from which I cannot send it out. ?The message sets in Outlook and even
> though I click on 'Send' it always goes to the out box of Outlook and
> sits there not going anywhere. Anyone else had this problem with
> Outlook??
> On Mar 19, 2:31 pm, Gmail Guide Yellow wrote:
> > Now that Gmail provides both POP and IMAP access, it's about time to
> > decide: which one's better for you? Let's break them down...
> > POP:
> > - offers one-way downloading of your messages from the Gmail servers
> > to your computer
> > - always downloads the entire message, making it easy to back-up your
> > mail
> > - only downloads your messages -- not your labels
> > - good for people who don't want to leave mail on Gmail's servers, or
> > don't want two-way synchronization
> > IMAP:
> > - offers two-way syncing between Gmail and mail client actions. If you
> > read a message in your email client, it will be marked read on the
> > web!
> > - save space by downloading only the message headers, or download
> > whole messages to work offline
> > - your labels appear as folders, and vice versa -- so it's easy to
> > stay organized
> > - provides access to Gmail's Drafts, Sent Mail and Spam folders
> > - great if you check your mail from multiple computers or mobile
> > devices -- you'll see the same messages and folders, no matter what
> > email client you're using
> > - a flexible, more reliable, more complete access choice
> > Still not sure? We think IMAP is best for most. If it's not quite
> > right for you, you can always switch.
This discussion of IMAP does not seem accurate. I recently switched
several mailing lists to Gmail IMAP, and the messages on my 2 Macs
(and one iPhone) were NOT downloading to all three machines. I've
meticulously made sure all the settings were the same in Mail.app, and
it still does not work.
The Macs are Intel with Tiger OS X 10.4.11, and Mail.app is up to
date.
The whole problem completely defeats the purpose of using IMAP.
BTW, this does NOT happen with any of my regular POP accounts.
> Now that Gmail provides both POP and IMAP access, it's about time to
> decide: which one's better for you? Let's break them down...
> POP:
> - offers one-way downloading of your messages from the Gmail servers
> to your computer
> - always downloads the entire message, making it easy to back-up your
> mail
> - only downloads your messages -- not your labels
> - good for people who don't want to leave mail on Gmail's servers, or
> don't want two-way synchronization
> IMAP:
> - offers two-way syncing between Gmail and mail client actions. If you
> read a message in your email client, it will be marked read on the
> web!
> - save space by downloading only the message headers, or download
> whole messages to work offline
> - your labels appear as folders, and vice versa -- so it's easy to
> stay organized
> - provides access to Gmail's Drafts, Sent Mail and Spam folders
> - great if you check your mail from multiple computers or mobile
> devices -- you'll see the same messages and folders, no matter what
> email client you're using
> - a flexible, more reliable, more complete access choice
> Still not sure? We think IMAP is best for most. If it's not quite
> right for you, you can always switch.
I think you should perhaps do some research on the technologies before
writing abusive emails. What you have described is actually how POP
works by default without changing the configuration of your email
client. Not just Google POP - but every Post Office Protocol server.
Maybe you were having a bad day but it's still no excuse for such
harsh words especially considering you are asking for assistance. I
normally find civil and open discussion is the best way to get answers
to technical questions.
> Sorry to say, but POP account for gmail sucks big time. Everytiome I
> download mails on my mail client (outlook express), the mails still
> happen to remain in the inbox on the server. I have to manually delete
> the mails from the inbox by logging to my account on gmail on the
> server.
> I mean i never expected gmail service to be so pathetic and this been
> happening since like 15 days now. What is wrong out here and what is
> wrong with you people praising the service. I agreee its a free
> service but then google earns far more then expected from the ads and
> more to provide a better service. This is now going way below the
> f**** expectation.
> DOES GMAIL HAVE ANY REPLY TO THIS QUERY? I hope the gmail manager
> replies to my query.
i've found a bug in gmail. i tried to add a pop3 e-mail account to
gmail,
but i can't because gmail says i've already reached the limit.
the issue is that i don't have any other e-mail accounts in gmail.
this is the first one. i have zero e-mail accounts when the limit is
five.
here is the error message:
You already have the maximum number of accounts allowed.
the problem might be that i tried adding the e-mail account at least a
dozen
times. i had the wrong user and pw info, and made numerous attempts
to add the account (not gmail's fault). i think in this case, gmail
might be
counting the attempts as actual accounts.
what do you suggest i do? i'd really like to add the account.
> Now that Gmail provides both POP and IMAP access, it's about time to
> decide: which one's better for you? Let's break them down...
> POP:
> - offers one-way downloading of your messages from the Gmail servers
> to your computer
> - always downloads the entire message, making it easy to back-up your
> mail
> - only downloads your messages -- not your labels
> - good for people who don't want to leave mail on Gmail's servers, or
> don't want two-way synchronization
> IMAP:
> - offers two-way syncing between Gmail and mail client actions. If you
> read a message in your email client, it will be marked read on the
> web!
> - save space by downloading only the message headers, or download
> whole messages to work offline
> - your labels appear as folders, and vice versa -- so it's easy to
> stay organized
> - provides access to Gmail's Drafts, Sent Mail and Spam folders
> - great if you check your mail from multiple computers or mobile
> devices -- you'll see the same messages and folders, no matter what
> email client you're using
> - a flexible, more reliable, more complete access choice
> Still not sure? We think IMAP is best for most. If it's not quite
> right for you, you can always switch.
Sarah,
Curious if you could point me in the right direction to have Gmail
Host email from my domain?
I have the domain www.LiquidFinancialSolutions.com and want my name in
the front and @LiquidFinancialSolutions.com
I have that done with one of my other domains, but I no longer have my
IT guy....go daddy told me to contact Gmail...and can't seem to find
the right help. Please reply back to
[email address] too please...
Thank you!!!
Michael
> Now that Gmail provides both POP and IMAP access, it's about time to
> decide: which one's better for you? Let's break them down...
> POP:
> - offers one-way downloading of your messages from the Gmail servers
> to your computer
> - always downloads the entire message, making it easy to back-up your
> mail
> - only downloads your messages -- not your labels
> - good for people who don't want to leave mail on Gmail's servers, or
> don't want two-way synchronization
> IMAP:
> - offers two-way syncing between Gmail and mail client actions. If you
> read a message in your email client, it will be marked read on the
> web!
> - save space by downloading only the message headers, or download
> whole messages to work offline
> - your labels appear as folders, and vice versa -- so it's easy to
> stay organized
> - provides access to Gmail's Drafts, Sent Mail and Spam folders
> - great if you check your mail from multiple computers or mobile
> devices -- you'll see the same messages and folders, no matter what
> email client you're using
> - a flexible, more reliable, more complete access choice
> Still not sure? We think IMAP is best for most. If it's not quite
> right for you, you can always switch.
> Now that Gmail provides both POP and IMAP access, it's about time to
> decide: which one's better for you? Let's break them down...
> POP:
> - offers one-way downloading of your messages from the Gmail servers
> to your computer
> - always downloads the entire message, making it easy to back-up your
> mail
> - only downloads your messages -- not your labels
> - good for people who don't want to leave mail on Gmail's servers, or
> don't want two-way synchronization
> IMAP:
> - offers two-way syncing between Gmail and mail client actions. If you
> read a message in your email client, it will be marked read on the
> web!
> - save space by downloading only the message headers, or download
> whole messages to work offline
> - your labels appear as folders, and vice versa -- so it's easy to
> stay organized
> - provides access to Gmail's Drafts, Sent Mail and Spam folders
> - great if you check your mail from multiple computers or mobile
> devices -- you'll see the same messages and folders, no matter what
> email client you're using
> - a flexible, more reliable, more complete access choice
> Still not sure? We think IMAP is best for most. If it's not quite
> right for you, you can always switch.
> Now that Gmail provides both POP and IMAP access, it's about time to
> decide: which one's better for you? Let's break them down...
> POP:
> - offers one-way downloading of your messages from the Gmail servers
> to your computer
> - always downloads the entire message, making it easy to back-up your
> mail
> - only downloads your messages -- not your labels
> - good for people who don't want to leave mail on Gmail's servers, or
> don't want two-way synchronization
> IMAP:
> - offers two-way syncing between Gmail and mail client actions. If you
> read a message in your email client, it will be marked read on the
> web!
> - save space by downloading only the message headers, or download
> whole messages to work offline
> - your labels appear as folders, and vice versa -- so it's easy to
> stay organized
> - provides access to Gmail's Drafts, Sent Mail and Spam folders
> - great if you check your mail from multiple computers or mobile
> devices -- you'll see the same messages and folders, no matter what
> email client you're using
> - a flexible, more reliable, more complete access choice
> Still not sure? We think IMAP is best for most. If it's not quite
> right for you, you can always switch.
I see that one of the suggestions made about IMAP settings is to turn
the client's junk filters off. Does leaving them on cause a big
problem. I need my client (currently Mail.app) to filter junk on a
different account, and this seems to be a global setting, not an
account by account setting. Any advice, or how big a problem is junk
mail turned n with an IMAP account?
Hi is there a way that google can send me a text messsage on my mobile
when there is a alert? i mean like whnever there is an alert, google
will send me a text msg?My mobile phone is LG Viewty( its a PDA) any
help appreciated!
i have been using gmail application that i downloaded on my PDA from
www.gmail.com/app it was installed as java midlet manager and was
working fine, now i recently hard reset my PDA and lost all my
previous settings. i am now trying to download the same application
for gmail but i am not able to install it properly and after
installation it creates one funny looking icon of gmail in the midlet
manager and wen i try to run it i get msg error running the
application, can u suggest something about this? It'd be a huge help..
> I'm using IMAP and am happy so far - I like the speed with which I'm
> receiving the emails on the PDA/phone. The only issue I'm having is
> there's no 'archive' folder to put emails in on my PDA/phone. The
> only real option I have is to delete them, which deletes them
> completely (on the pc also). When I go to my PC and move them from
> the 'trash' folder to the 'archive' folder (which is where I really
> want them to be) the emails show back up on the PDA as 'unread'.
> Jacki
> On Mar 19, 11:31 am, Gmail Guide Yellow wrote:
> > Now that Gmail provides both POP and IMAP access, it's about time to
> > decide: which one's better for you? Let's break them down...
> > POP:
> > - offers one-way downloading of your messages from the Gmail servers
> > to your computer
> > - always downloads the entire message, making it easy to back-up your
> > mail
> > - only downloads your messages -- not your labels
> > - good for people who don't want to leave mail on Gmail's servers, or
> > don't want two-way synchronization
> > IMAP:
> > - offers two-way syncing between Gmail and mail client actions. If you
> > read a message in your email client, it will be marked read on the
> > web!
> > - save space by downloading only the message headers, or download
> > whole messages to work offline
> > - your labels appear as folders, and vice versa -- so it's easy to
> > stay organized
> > - provides access to Gmail's Drafts, Sent Mail and Spam folders
> > - great if you check your mail from multiple computers or mobile
> > devices -- you'll see the same messages and folders, no matter what
> > email client you're using
> > - a flexible, more reliable, more complete access choice
> > Still not sure? We think IMAP is best for most. If it's not quite
> > right for you, you can always switch.- Hide quoted text -
I have configured my Outlook Express (OE) with Gmail IMAP. But I am
not able to read my already downloaded messages after I go offline.
Suppose I was online and synced my OE client and then went offline.
Now if I goto any message in some folder, I can't read it unless I go
online. Similar case if I close OE and open it again. And without
going online, if I try to read any message, still can't read them. Is
there a setting in OE to be able to read Gmail IMAP offline after
syncing or Gmail POP is the only alternative? I need to use IMAP cause
I have to access my Gmail from multiple computers. Please help.
Thanks!
> Now that Gmail provides both POP and IMAP access, it's about time to
> decide: which one's better for you? Let's break them down...
> POP:
> - offers one-way downloading of your messages from the Gmail servers
> to your computer
> - always downloads the entire message, making it easy to back-up your
> mail
> - only downloads your messages -- not your labels
> - good for people who don't want to leave mail on Gmail's servers, or
> don't want two-way synchronization
> IMAP:
> - offers two-way syncing between Gmail and mail client actions. If you
> read a message in your email client, it will be marked read on the
> web!
> - save space by downloading only the message headers, or download
> whole messages to work offline
> - your labels appear as folders, and vice versa -- so it's easy to
> stay organized
> - provides access to Gmail's Drafts, Sent Mail and Spam folders
> - great if you check your mail from multiple computers or mobile
> devices -- you'll see the same messages and folders, no matter what
> email client you're using
> - a flexible, more reliable, more complete access choice
> Still not sure? We think IMAP is best for most. If it's not quite
> right for you, you can always switch.