How do I restore a deleted message?
By answering the question "How do I restore a deleted message?"
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My experience is to highlight the message, rightclick, and select 'move to inbox' - that should do it. :)
Funda le mpendulo ngokuhambisana nalesi sihloko 👍 1All Replies (8)
Juno 5 is at http://www.oldversion.com/windows/juno/
Also 100% agree with Rick, FWIW.
Wayne Mery said
Also 100% agree with Rick, FWIW.
Hi and thanks, Wayne. Are you referring to my comments about backing up?
Reponse to Rick regarding the “'account settings' menu”: Thanks. I was able to find the “'account settings' menu” following your suggestion.
Response to Rick regarding Juno 4: I was able to find Juno 4 using the link you provided. I will try installing it on one of my systems and see whether it works that way.
Response to David regarding Juno 5: I will try that too. Both of these suggestions are great and may solve my problem. I much prefer Juno to Thunderbird.
I tried Juno4 and Juno5 from the links your provided and they both have the same problem as my already installed Juno.
It looks like I am stuck with Thunderbird for the foreseeable future. I will have to figure out how to "train" the apparently untrainable spam filter and how to save my emails. Apparently, my Thunderbird is set to IMAP, as my email remains on the server. I'll have to figure out how to archive my email and then change to POP
Thanks again to yall.
Joe Schmoe said
It looks like I am stuck with Thunderbird for the foreseeable future. I will have to figure out how to "train" the apparently untrainable spam filter and how to save my emails. Apparently, my Thunderbird is set to IMAP, as my email remains on the server. I'll have to figure out how to archive my email and then change to POP
Train the junk filter: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/thunderbird-and-junk-spam-messages
Switch to POP: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/faq-changing-imap-pop
Response to Rick:
Regarding the Junk/Spam Filter:
The documentation says:
“using an algorithm means a message previously marked as junk is not guaranteed to be automatically marked as junk in the future.”
Essentially, they are saying that their algorithm is USELESS.
“Sometimes Thunderbird's junk filter might get it wrong and mark good messages as junk.”
Essentially, this says that the junk filter is not only useless, but actually dangerous.
Thunderbird uses the prestigious label “Bayesian” for their “spam filter” which is actually worse than useless.
We're happy to help - but support is best offered when there is primarily one topic area per question/thread.
Locking this thread as it has gone well beyond the original topic. (now on the third?)