LinuxLinks.com
Newbies What Next ? News Forums Calendar

Search





News Sections
Home
General News (3972/0)
Reviews (626/0)
Press Releases (464/0)
Distributions (187/0)
Software (807/0)
Hardware (522/0)
Security (192/0)
Tutorials (337/0)
Off Topic (180/0)


User Functions
Username:

Password:

Don't have an account yet? Sign up as a New User


Events
There are no upcoming events



KMail In Depth   
Friday, January 14 2005 @ 09:11 PM EST
Contributed by: glosser

LinuxPlanet brings us a tutorial on using KMail, along with setting up GPG.

KMail has long been my Linux email client of choice for a number of reasons: nice clean interface, easily customizable and configurable, stable, and more features than you can shake a stick at. Today we'll dig into migrating from other email clients, encrypting messages and key signing, and configuring multiple accounts and identities.

A quick review on message storage is in order. Most Linux mail clients store messages in one of two file formats: mbox or maildir. mbox is a flat file; all of the messages for a particular mail folder, such as your Inbox, are all stuffed into a single file. Maildir stores each message in a separate file. In these here modern times maildir is the format of choice, because it is faster and more fault-tolerant. And it is required for IMAP.

You should also know that KMail requires kdelibs, kdebase, and kdepim. It runs on Linux or most any Unix. The latest stable version is 1.7; this article covers versions 1.5 and up.

Review time is over; on to migration.

Full story

  [ Views: 1473 ]  


KMail In Depth | 0 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
No user comments.


What's Related
  • Full story
  • More by glosser
  • More from Tutorials


  • Story Options
  • Mail Story to a Friend
  • Printable Story Format


  • We have written a range of guides highlighting excellent free books for popular programming languages. Check out the following guides: C, C++, C#, Java, JavaScript, CoffeeScript, HTML, Python, Ruby, Perl, Haskell, PHP, Lisp, R, Prolog, Scala, Scheme, and SQL.

    Built with GeekLog and phpBB
    Comments to the webmaster are welcome
    Copyright 2009 LinuxLinks.com - All rights reserved