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ameerat42
10-03-2018, 5:52pm
:confused013:confused013

How do you "Save" emails from the Yahoo Mail interface as .eml files, both singly
and in batches/bulk.

Searching so far has indicated you no longer can:eek: If that's right, I must say,
give me chaos any day.

If there's no other way than by using Outlook, please get it over with fast.
But I'm hoping for a sneaky (and elegant) back-door method.

-- And as I've recently taken to Gmail, I'm looking into how to do it there as well.:nod:
Ta.

Tannin
10-03-2018, 9:02pm
Gmail spies on you and exploits you, but otherwise provides a generally decent service.

Yahoo spies on you and exploits you, but otherwise provides a generally dreadful service.

You can access Gmail with any standard email client, such as Thunderbird or Incredimail, and most of the more popular non-standard ones, such as Outlook.

ameerat42
10-03-2018, 10:10pm
Gmail spies on you and exploits you, but otherwise provides a generally decent service.

Yahoo spies on you and exploits you, but otherwise provides a generally dreadful service.

You can access Gmail with any standard email client, such as Thunderbird or Incredimail, and most of the more popular non-standard ones, such as Outlook.

Ta, Tannin. I'll take that as meaning I...---G-A-A-AHHH!!!:eek:

Tannin
10-03-2018, 11:04pm
I'm not sure what you mean there, AM, but to clarify my point, with Gmail you can use any normal email client (such as Thunderbird and also probably Outlook - Outlook is weird but it's so common that Google has no doubt worked around its idiosyncracies). This means that you can save any message in the format of your choice. Email clients are designed from the ground up to handle email, and tend to be pretty good at it. Using a web browser for email usually works OK for basic tasks, but you nearly always get better performance from a made-for-purpose tool than you do from a one-size-fits-all one. Consider, for example, the difference between a shifting spanner and the correct size ring spanner.

As a matter of detail, Yahoo changed their interface a year or so ago in an attempt to lock out email clients. Their purpose was just what you'd expect from those fools: they wanted to force customers to use a web browser and see lots of advertising. The result - also just as you'd expect - is that half their their few remaining users have got annoyed enough to leave (it seems that you are yet another one), and now Yahoo serves fewer ads than ever. Yahoo management has an interesting way of trying to run a business which essentially amounts to the motto "when you are in a hole, buy a bigger shovel".

ameerat42
10-03-2018, 11:19pm
That's what I understood. Well, at least I don't get any ads, except when I exit to the Y7 Hone page
and get the drivel they call "News".

Well, a bit of culling may be in order, and then... TBA when I figger it out. I might have to succumb
to using an email client after all.

bobt
11-03-2018, 12:22pm
I have to agree that using an independent email client is the way to go. The interfaces of Gmail and others are irritating, whereas Thunderbird just works. Give it a go, you won't look back.

ameerat42
11-03-2018, 12:55pm
Ta, Bob - and Tannin again. Looks like I'll affta!

Just one Q: Does it download all "cloud" emails to the HDD, or can you be selective?

(Then, expect to hear the announcement that, "Thunderbird is (the) go!...")

bobt
11-03-2018, 1:16pm
Ta, Bob - and Tannin again. Looks like I'll affta!

Just one Q: Does it download all "cloud" emails to the HDD, or can you be selective?

(Then, expect to hear the announcement that, "Thunderbird is (the) go!...")


I'm no expert, so maybe this link might help (https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/imap-synchronization)

I always download everything to my HD - and all messages are stored in perpetuity to be held and used in evidence against you. I only delete total crap, and I have a very high crap tolerance! 8*)

I just know that Thunderbird has been a very useful, easy to use program for a long time, and it's not Microsoft which is a bonus, and the price is right!

ameerat42
11-03-2018, 1:24pm
Ta. This bit...
"Synchronization

To understand message synchronization, consider the following scenarios:

A message is downloaded to Thunderbird and deleted in Thunderbird. (The message must be deleted from both the local machine and the email server.)

A message is downloaded to Thunderbird and later deleted by a web-based client (such as Yahoo Mail or Gmail). (The message must be deleted from the Thunderbird message repository.)

A draft message is composed and saved (but not sent) in Thunderbird. (The draft must be copied from the Thunderbird message repository to the email server.) "

Indicates the POP messages are only copied, not moved.

Tannin
11-03-2018, 2:03pm
There are three main email protocols. SMTP is always used for sending. You can use either POP or IMAP to receive messages. All proper email servers and all proper email clients can work using either POP or IMAP.

POP (Post Office Protocol) works just like a post office box. The server collects messages and moves them into your box. After that, it is up to you to keep them (on your own machine) or delete them as you wish.

With IMAP, the messages are stored on the server in California (or wherever). You just get copies of them.

IMAP has the advantage that you can easily use multiple different machines to access your email. POP has the advantage that it is much simpler and you have personal control over your own data.

Yes, it is possible to merely copy (rather than move) messages using POP. In general, it's not a terribly good idea. If you need to do this, you may well be better off using IMAP (which is designed for multiple clients).

Webmail (e.g., Yahoo, Gmail via your browser) isn't IMAP but it works in a broadly similar way.

ameerat42
11-03-2018, 3:15pm
Well, guys...

Thunderbird is gohw!

(But if you delete from Tbird it also deletes from the Gmail inbox. Will have to watch that one:nod:)

I have bulk saved emails, but there is no "bulk print" as such. You have to allow each print job
as it pops up. OK!:confused013

So ta lotly to all who twisted my arm.

ameerat42
18-04-2018, 2:35pm
Update on Thunderbird...
So, bulk import/export of messages requires an Add-On for T'bird called
ImportexportTools from https://freeshell.de/~kaosmos/mboximport-en.html

:) to report: It works :nod:

John King
18-04-2018, 3:55pm
Am, I use POP rather than IMAP.

Map all my devices to the same server. Most are set up never to delete messages from my server(s). My main email client (Outlook) leaves messages on the server for three days. This gives all my other devices to "catch up" with messages they haven't got yet.

All my email addresses eventually end up in my desktop inbox. And eventually they all get deleted from all the email servers, in most cases that happens as soon as they have been forwarded to somewhere else.

Works for me.

ameerat42
18-04-2018, 4:05pm
I see. So T'bird is IMAP only? I thought it was POP and IMAP :confused013

I have 3 email clients accessed through T'bird.

John King
18-04-2018, 5:23pm
As someone else said, almost all email clients/servers use both POP and IMAP.

I prefer POP because mail stays there until deliberately deleted by the desktop client.

With IMAP, deleting something on one device automatically makes it unavailable on any other. Cuts down the work, but means that there is no single, complete copy of all one's mail anywhere, except on someone else's server. I prefer to have that data on my computer rather than someone else's.

Secondly, my contacts database is held in Outlook. I don't want my contacts information available to third parties ...

ameerat42
18-04-2018, 5:28pm
Hmm! Then I must have POP, because my mail stays online even after "imported" into T'bird.

John King
18-04-2018, 5:51pm
It should be obvious when you look at your desktop email client settings, mate.

ameerat42
19-04-2018, 1:28pm
...than I thought.

OK, after thinking that I was happily using Thunderbird I found a couple of niggly glitches:
1) It has not imported the Sent Mail boxes from my Webmail and Yahoo accounts, only from Gmail;
2) I can't seem to save attachments, even using the "text with attachments" option;
3) That's all so far :confused013

So, I wondered whether Outlook does the same job. - And is that now just called "Mail" in Win 10?

- - - Updated - - -

OK, it seems that this happens with all POP accounts - no import of Sent Mail boxes, only Inbox.
(Dunno what happened with Gmail, then???)

arthurking83
19-04-2018, 3:57pm
As for Outlook/Mail .. Mail is the old Outlook Express .. not Outlook(as in the atrocious email client in the Office suite.

With T'bird, if you delete an email in one of your email accounts, it doesn't delete it, it send it to the trash/deleted box on that email server.

But there is a setting!
By default, it's set to send emails to the trash/deleted box on the server.
There is a tickmark in one of the settings to not keep copies on the server.

I don't have Yahoo, but I have a Gmail and a Hotmail accounts(for junk emails).

Depending on how you setup T'bird interface, you should have a 'folder pane' on the LHS of the main window. If not, then View->Layout and look for the tickmark on Folder Pane.
Once you have all your mail servers setup, they will all be listed in the order you added them.
For each one, the folders you've set up are 'links' to the same folders for each mail account.

That is, if you open the Trash foler(on the LHS folder Pane) it will open all the trash/bin/deleted folders for each email account in a list.

if you delete or empty the trash, only then do you delete them from the server and the local copy too.

Tip1: use the calendar. Best calendar client by two country miles. Can be a bit tricky to setup Google Calendar in the beginning, but once you've worked it out, it's integration is seamless.
back in the day, I once tried to use Microsoft's version of an online calendar, and .. well it lasted about 5 mins before I almost threw the PC in the recycling!!
I'm a heavy user of the Calendar feature.

Tip1: for backups, don't use T'bird directly, get a small program called MzBackup and back it up like that. It will create monster sized backup files, depending on your saved/archived email count(and attachements), but far easier to restore program and then to backup emails.
I use it to save both T'bird and FF user settings.
I used to use T'brids backup system, but it annihilated some of my emails, with their PDF attachments relating to work invoices, and on restoration, couldn't read any of the invoices .. at tax time!
No longer trust it, so I've used Mozbackup for about 10 odd years now.

I'm pretty sure hotmail is POP, not IMAP(can't remember now) .. and it has access to sent emails .. for me going back to 3/10/2007! :eek:
Not sure why it isn't working for 'ya on webmail and yahoo .. maybe it takes a while to populate the list.

As for attachments, for pdf attachments, it should give you three options in the body of the email containing the pdf, that is preview/open/save.
I don't save, on the whole, I save the entire email into a dedicated folder.
The pdf is then saved too .. and saved/archived/backed up when I run Mozbackup(hence why the T'bird Mozbackup files are giga-huge!)

If you save the attachment, and don't delete the email and or attachment, you then have two copies of that attachment on the hard drive.
So if you save the attachment, get into the habit of deleting the email ... hence why I don't save the attachment as a separate file.

For image attachments, I may save the attachment, but it's usually for a temporary purpose, or I know if it's for keeps, then save the attachment and remove it from the email, or delete the email/attachment.

ameerat42
19-04-2018, 5:37pm
Short answer: Ta a lot. Now looking into what you said...

Background: This all started because Optus Webmail gave me occasional mail quota warnings, and some few recently.

No problem with Gmail, and Yahoo Mail, except the latter is now part of B-Oath! :rolleyes: and users are subject to
some draconian privacy incursions (see other thread). So I might do all my squaring and plotting with Gmail now :D

John King
19-04-2018, 7:29pm
...than I thought.

OK, after thinking that I was happily using Thunderbird I found a couple of niggly glitches:
1) It has not imported the Sent Mail boxes from my Webmail and Yahoo accounts, only from Gmail;
2) I can't seem to save attachments, even using the "text with attachments" option;
3) That's all so far :confused013

So, I wondered whether Outlook does the same job. - And is that now just called "Mail" in Win 10?

- - - Updated - - -

OK, it seems that this happens with all POP accounts - no import of Sent Mail boxes, only Inbox.
(Dunno what happened with Gmail, then???)

Am, I have completely lost track of who is replying to whom, and what ...

Outlook is a desktop client which manages inbox, outbox, sent mail, drafts and junk mail in whatever folder structure you choose under these heads. It also manages contacts and calendars. It is the biggest industry standard around.

Outlook is an utterly different program from Mail and Outlook Express (but don't ever uninstall Outlook Express from an XP or earlier OS if running Outlook ... ).

I run Outlook 2003. It works fine. I backup the Outlook data file (default = "outlook.pst" - bad choice ... ) in many different places. My data file is currently over 6 GB in size.

ameerat42
19-04-2018, 7:35pm
Ta, JK. Just an update.

Tannin
20-04-2018, 2:16pm
Outlook isn't an "industry standard", it is an industry.

I'm not kidding. There is an entire worldwide industry devoted to safeguarding, backing up, restoring, recovering, and otherwise fixing up the incredible, cumbersome, obscure, chaotic mess that is Outlook and its brother in crime, Exchange. Thousands, literally thousands, of programs exist simply to plug one or more of the many gaping holes, usability disasters, and data integrity gaps Outlook has. Yes, a whole damn industry, and a big one, purely devoted to fixing all the problems with Outlook.

Well, at least some of them. Nothing can fix Outlook's innate complexity and obscurity, nor its comprehensive and extraordinary failure to follow basic industry standards, including many decreed by Microsoft themselves.

Compare, for instance, the difficulty and complexity of recovering data from a crashed system. With a properly designed email client (any properly designed email client - I'll use Thunderbird as my example but there are plenty of others) recovery is simplicity itself.

Let's suppose perhaps the most common of all data recovery situations. You have a crashed computer running Windows which cannot start up. You need to recover the email from it onto a new or rebuilt computer. You require the address book, the server settings and passwords, all of the custom user settings, and of course all of the stored emails. With Thunderbird (or any other decent email client), you simply install Thunderbird onto the new computer in the normal way. Then to recover the data and set every little thing up exactly as before, follow this very simple one-step process.

(1) Copy the data folder onto the new system.

That's it. There is no Step 2. You are finished. Job done. Everything works. Your system can send mail, get mail, knows the name and port and protocol of your mail server(s), retains your address book intact, and has all of your old emails stored exactly where you left them.

What's more, you didn't even have to think about looking for the data folder in 30 different places, each one more obscure than the last, nor did you have to worry about which particular version of the program you are using, nor did you have to wonder whether some of the data was stored in one place and some of it (for no good reason) stored in a different place. The data is stored exactly where it is supposed to be stored; stored where it belongs; stored, in fact, precisely where Microsoft's own rules say it should be stored: the standard Windows user data folder, which is where every other program designed since the stone age puts it. And what's more, that folder stores the whole of the data. Unlike Outlook, it doesn't leave important stuff out and require you to waste anything from minutes to days manually recreating stuff.

(On Windows XP and earlier this folder is c:\documents and settings\yourusername\application data\thunderbird. On later systems it is c:\users\yourusername\appdata\roaming\thunderbird. You will see that it is stored right next to all the other data folders for all your other programs, exactly where you would expect to find it. Notice the the "c:\users\yourusername\appdata\roaming" part is always the same, for any program. So all you really have to find to restore Thunderbird is the "Thunderbird" folder. The same applies to all all other good software.)

Exactly what do you need to copy? Just take the whole folder.

Where do you copy it to? The same place it came from, only on the new system.

How do you copy it? Any way you like. Drag and drop is fine.

What do you have to do after you have copied it to make the system start using it correctly? Nothing at all.

What special software do you need to make it work? None.

What special knowledge do you need, other than knowing where Windows recommends you put data files? None.

What special skills do you need? None.

What is a fair price to pay for someone doing this task for you? Anything over $20 is a rip-off. Most technicians wouldn't bother to charge for it at all. Anyone smart enough to hold a camera with the lens pointing outward and the viewfinder pointing inward doesn't even need a technician. you can do it yourself. Takes two minutes. Less than two minutes if you don't stop to put the kettle on.

So let's just repeat the procedure so that we are clear:

(1) Copy the data folder from the standard place on the old system to the standard place on the new system.

There is no Step 2. This works with any version of the software, old or new. It even works going from an ancient Windows XP system to a brand new Windows 10 system. It just works. And it's one easy step. Most other rescue, recovery, and maintenance tasks are equally simple.

I look forward to the reading the equivalent instructions for Outlook, though where the instructions for a properly designed program like Thunderbird can be summarised accurately in one short sentence, those for Outlook, if they are sufficiently comprehensive to be useful in the majority of situations across different software and Windows versions, will fill several pages at very least, and quite often an entire book or expensive IT course.

(Actually, I lied. I won't really read the Outlook instructions. I'll just laugh at how long and complicated they are, or (if I happen to feel like it) I'll point out a few of the many gaping holes there will be in them short of a novel-length reply. I've spent half a lifetime being paid to deal with that steaming pile of donkey vomit known as Outlook and Exchange, and no matter how much money I made from it on the day, it was never enough to make up for the experience. Retirement from that horrorshow couldn't come fast enough.)

arthurking83
20-04-2018, 2:40pm
..... Retirement from that horrorshow couldn't come fast enough.

:lol:

So the upside of Outlook is that it allowed you a retirement.

If everyone had migrated to Thunderbird .. they'd never have enlisted your services to repair dud software .. and you'd still be slaving your life away.

John King
20-04-2018, 4:12pm
Tony, with Outlook, you copy one file from wherever it is on one system to wherever you want it on the other system. By default, it is exactly where Microsoft says to put all data - in the user data folders.

This location is the one place data should (almost) never be stored, particularly on multiuser systems where all users require access to the same data.

The standard location is also almost impossible to backup because of all the other crap stored there.

It is also where poxware will look first for data it might want.

Outlook also comes with its own database repair tool - scanpst.exe. Works very well.

You might think I disagree with almost everything you said. You would be right. Outlook provides a complete solution to personal communications and associated functions. To my knowledge, no other program provides such broad and simple integration. Certainly not Thunderbird ...

ameerat42
20-04-2018, 4:51pm
Lots of info, ta...

Tannin
20-04-2018, 7:17pm
Cheers John.

with Outlook, you copy one file from wherever it is on one system to wherever you want it on the other system No you don't. You have to set up the entire communication system again - accounts, server names, passwords, ports, the lot. And all manually. (Unless you have spent whatever it takes to enrich the Outlook-fix industry by buying software specifically designed to fix this particular one of Outlook's many problems.)

By default, it is exactly where Microsoft says to put all data - in the user data folders. Not so. I can't even remember how many different places the various Outlook and associated Microsoft mail product versions have dreamed up to store their data over the years, but there have been plenty. Outlook is very nearly the only program to store user data in such an obscure location. Everything else puts it where it belongs - in users/username/appdata/

(the standard location) is the one place data should (almost) never be stored Requires no comment.

is also almost impossible to backup because of all the other crap stored there. Nonsense. It's the easiest thing in the world to backup. I have no idea how many times I have backed up the data stored in that location over the years, but it would be many thousands. Utterly trouble-free.

Outlook also comes with its own database repair tool Compare to properly designed programs which (a) tend not to mess up their databases in the first place, and (b) have this facility built in. (Thunderbird is an example. There are others.)

Outlook does have an advantage in the corporate world where its non-email features are useful, and where there is an expensive and highly skilled IT department to overcome its many failings. Without that backup, it's a minefield of difficulty and complexity. And as for Exchange, nothing I could say here would do it justice. I'd rather kiss a Cane Toad than work with Exchange again.

John King
20-04-2018, 8:24pm
We will just have to agree to disagree, Tony.

Third party s/w is usually a security nightmare (security? What's security ... ); and has given me more grief over many years than I care to contemplate for all sorts of reasons.

I won't even start on Chunderbird.

Tannin
20-04-2018, 8:55pm
Cheers John. Yes, I don't think we will ever agree on this one. Security, of course, is vastly superior with open source software where problems with the code are right there for all the world to see. No secret bugs. In the trade, back in the day when the awful Outlook Express was common, we always used to call it Outbreak Express. In those days, Outbreak Outlook used to practice a number of downright insanities, notably auto-running macros and auto-opening attachments. Yes, it's hard to believe, but it's a fact: a number of the all-time biggest world-wide virus events were specific to Outlook. That was back in ... oh ... probably about Windows 98 days. They have fixed it up a bit since then, obviously.

For those of us with grey hair and long memories, here is a flashback to one of them more famous ones: https://www.welivesecurity.com/2016/07/15/flashback-friday-melissa-virus/

John King
20-04-2018, 9:03pm
Outlook and Outlook Express are very different programs, which I'm sure you know.

Completely different data model, just for starters.

Some myths persist in spite of all evidence to the contrary - e.g. that Macs can't/don't get viruses ... Where does the term "rootkit" come from again? :lol:.

And nothing will protect against a user doing something ill-advised.