![]() ![]() Mailbox folders are file system directories.Īttachments are decoded and put into a separate directory. One killer feature is text search through the filters for either terms in the filter or any target folder name.Įach mailbox is a pair of files. I have almost 2000 rules, most to automatically filter into mailboxes. I have mail going back to 1994 currently at 3,880,090,729 bytes in 18,845 Files, 70 Folders.Įudora still has by far the most capable filtering I've found. Īs of a few days ago this is running on Windows 7 Ultimate in a 2006 era Lenovo 3000 N100 "value notebook" with a Core-Duo (not Core2) 1.6GHz, 3GB RAM, and a new 500GB 7200rpm disk. The heaviest lifting email client that I have is Eudora 7.1.0.9 paid-version but it is no longer sold. And as long as those are kept below 2GB it seems to be OK. As long as they use folders, this gets factored into a file per OE mailbox. ![]() I have clients using Outlook Express with obscene amounts of mail - pushing 8GB - mostly due to emailed pictures and videos. The archive feature that creates a new PST with the exact folder structure of the original and moves all messages not touched since a specified date is useful for managing this. It can be used for large email if you are diligent about keeping multiple PST files and managing their size. I am familiar with Outlook (in all versions now including 2010). I know I could theoretically forward all of it there, and back, but that approach doesn't make my boss very happy (email handling policies and similar). Post scriptum: I love but cannot use it for work. If it is portable, that would also be nice, but I can also live without it. The thing is, I would love to have them all in email client since I often go after some old mails (slow projects). Then I usually take the files, move them onto a dvd, delete all messages I can do without and start anew. I've noticed that 'standard' Outlook Express (with whose interface I've been very happy) gets awfully slow after a while. Large portion of mails I receive come with attachments (zip, rar, pdf, dwg, etc.) and within a month I usually have another 1,5-2Gb of new mail. What would be a good email client for handling large amounts of mail ? It is not currently accepting new answers or interactions.Īlthough the title sums it up nice, I'll repeat and explain. This question and its answers are locked because the question is off-topic but has historical significance. After rebooting, everything is now running error-free.Locked. I then installed Avast using the offline installer. So, I got rid of about a half dozen of bogus entries. I could easily tell they were bogus for example, one was under HK_CURRENT_USER, and would have been "Software" except the first character was garbled - displayed as some graphic character. While doing that, I noticed some bogus entries in the registry, at least one of which seemed to have been added by Avast. Then before installing, I opened up the registry editor, and removed all Avast entries. So, I then downloaded the offline installer for the latest version, uninstalled Avast, rebooted. For those who may find this via search, I first tried doing a repair from within the Avast interface. After posting this, I'll try doing a fresh install to see if that helps. Now I've been getting this crash message for about 2 weeks. That issue was resolved by Avast, so I re-enabled all shields. I had previously applied the beta software when the Anti-Exploit shield was preventing my VirtualBox VMs from running. No other security software on this system. Every boot, it says "Sorry, we've crashed". I'm facing the same issue on Windows 7 64-bit SP1. ![]()
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