Quizzes & Puzzles16 mins ago
Deleting Emails
I use Windows LiveMail on my PC and laptop.
The laptop has nearly five thousand messages in its inbox because I'm not sure whether deleting them would also remove them from my PC, which is my main machine. Are my fears unfounded ?
Windows 7/Firefox.
D
The laptop has nearly five thousand messages in its inbox because I'm not sure whether deleting them would also remove them from my PC, which is my main machine. Are my fears unfounded ?
Windows 7/Firefox.
D
Answers
Windows Live Mail is an email client which (like Outlook, Outlook Express and Hotmail) downloads emails to your computer so that they can be read locally. The default setting would be to atomatically delete those emails for your email provider's server, so that they wouldn't be available via any other machine. However if you've got the same emails on two...
09:35 Wed 23rd Dec 2015
I don't know anything about Windows Live Mail; some mail tools delete from the server when you delete the message, others just delete the message from the computer you are reading it on.
I suggest that you choose a message that you're not bothered about keeping and delete it from your laptop. Then go and look on your PC and see if it's still there or if it's gone. If it's still there you're safe to delete them from your laptop.
Incidentally, to highlight all the messages (or all the files in a directory) highlight one of them then send ctrl+a; much easier than scrolling down a 5000 long list.
I suggest that you choose a message that you're not bothered about keeping and delete it from your laptop. Then go and look on your PC and see if it's still there or if it's gone. If it's still there you're safe to delete them from your laptop.
Incidentally, to highlight all the messages (or all the files in a directory) highlight one of them then send ctrl+a; much easier than scrolling down a 5000 long list.
depends on what they say
hur hur hur
deleting on the windows system just pulls off the name label tag and the body of the message is sent out to the unused part of the computer
search programs which search for 'does my bum look big in this' and other paraterrorist codes can then uncover the remainder of the text
and then it is off to prison for christmas to join a few a very few of your para pals I am afraid
to delete securely you need an erazer prog
which overprints each space of the message.
free ones available on the internet
I do this for any confidential commercial data/information
hur hur hur
deleting on the windows system just pulls off the name label tag and the body of the message is sent out to the unused part of the computer
search programs which search for 'does my bum look big in this' and other paraterrorist codes can then uncover the remainder of the text
and then it is off to prison for christmas to join a few a very few of your para pals I am afraid
to delete securely you need an erazer prog
which overprints each space of the message.
free ones available on the internet
I do this for any confidential commercial data/information
Windows Live Mail is an email client which (like Outlook, Outlook Express and Hotmail) downloads emails to your computer so that they can be read locally. The default setting would be to atomatically delete those emails for your email provider's server, so that they wouldn't be available via any other machine. However if you've got the same emails on two computers you must have over-ridden that setting and you've now got two totally separate copies of each email. Deleting one won't affect the other.
If you want to check that your emails are stored locally (and not on a remote server) simply disconnect your machines from the internet. If your emails are still available then, clearly, they're stored as files on each computer and you can safely delete them on one machine without affecting the other. (It's no different to deleting a picture on one of your computers, that you've also got on the other. The second copy won't be affected in any way).
If you want to check that your emails are stored locally (and not on a remote server) simply disconnect your machines from the internet. If your emails are still available then, clearly, they're stored as files on each computer and you can safely delete them on one machine without affecting the other. (It's no different to deleting a picture on one of your computers, that you've also got on the other. The second copy won't be affected in any way).