![emailchemy emailchemy](https://mac-cdn.softpedia.com/screenshots/Emailchemy_4.jpg)
I recently tested your Emailchemy 9.9.2 converter in WinXP after struggling with all kinds of things to import old old emails f rom Netscape and Eudora into Outlook Express 6.
#Emailchemy portable
PopTray's last release was in 2006.Emailchemy reads email from the proprietary formats of the most popular (and many of yesterday's forgotten) email applications and converts it to a standard, portable format that any application can use.Įmailchemy converts proprietary email formats to The One True E-mail Format - RFC-2822 (formerly RFC-822). It has explicit support for recent versions of Windows. If you don't want to run it under Wine PopTrayMinus is a open source mail checker for Linux written by somebody else that tries to provides a useful subset of PopTray. The Wine Application Database states that PopTray runs "perfectly" under Linux although they didn't test any of its plug-ins. You have to look in its forums for some of the plugins. It supports POP3 by default but has plugins for Hotmail, IMAP, Microsoft Speech, Flash the LEDs, SSL, YAC (Yet Another Caller ID Program) and Bayesian spam filtering. You can preview messages and/or delete messages without downloading them. The rules can include regular expressions. It supports rules that can play a sound, run another program, display a balloon popup, change the color of the icon in the system tray, delete the message from the server, mark the message as spam etc. Poptray is an open-source mail-checker for Windows. See the proceeding section for more information.
#Emailchemy archive
That lets you view the mail using a browser (don't confuse this with webmail, the XML file with the mail is on your hard disk, flash drive etc.), and you can add additional mbox files to the archive later on. It supports Linux and OS X.ĭon't overlook the possibility of archiving the mbox files using Mbox2xml instead. It does not support viewing them as its meant primarily for archiving messages. Archmbox is a Perl based script that lets you list, move, and copy messages from one mbox file to another. There is a MBox Office - Viewer and Migration Assistant sold in the Mac App Store.
#Emailchemy free
There don't appear to be any free mbox viewers for OS X or Linux. There is also a MBOX File Viewer utility that is the freeware version of a commercial product, a freeware CoolUtils Mbox Viewer, and a freeware SysTools MBOX Viewer. It is much easier to use than alternatives such as configuring a Windows version of Mutt or Pine. It has a Windows executable and sources that are wxWidgets compatible.
#Emailchemy full
MboxViewer is a free utility to view the contents of mbox files, with full MIME support, the ability to open mbox files larger than 4GB, and view attachments. You can create a POP or IMAP account for Google Apps in Thunderbird. It replaces the Google Email Uploader program. Google Apps Migration for Microsoft Outlook can be used to migrate messages, contacts and calendars from Outlook to a free Google Apps account. Its a better way to upload mail to Gmail but since it is Thunderbird specific program that only knows about mbox files its not useful if you are trying to migrate messages from another email client. NET program that won't run under Wine or using Mono). Its actively maintained and deals with issues such as not uploading duplicates, Unicode, Gmail nested labels and the Google mail quota that its not clear that GML knows about. Google webMail Filer for Thunderbird is a utility to upload messages from Thunderbird's mail folders to your Gmail account. However, if you are uploading messages from a mbox file you are better off using "Google webMail Filer for Thunderbird" instead.
#Emailchemy install
GML has versions for Windows (all files needed are included) and Linux / OS X (requires you to install Python).
![emailchemy emailchemy](https://img.lawyerment.com/dl/screenshots/29/14227.jpg)
![emailchemy emailchemy](https://img.generation-nt.com/0001619890.jpg)
It hides the fact that the message is forwarded and eliminates the grunt work of individually forwarding all of your messages. It supports Mbox (what Mozilla uses), MailDir (Qmail, others), MMDF (Mutt), MH (NMH), and Babyl (Emacs RMAIL) formats. The Gmail Loader reads messages from your existing mail files and forwards them to either the Inbox or Sent Mail folder in a Gmail account.