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Mike Barnard wrote:
The domain, which I shall call for now "thedomain.com", can have as many pop3 logins as I wish. But to simplify things I have just one at the moment. I'll call it "domainpop" for now. It's a matter of seconds to add new ones, that is no problem. And, as far as Outlook is concerned, all these aliases are actually the same account. The million pound question: Is there a way to force the 'reply to' address to change depending on the 'to' address on the email that I received, staying within the a single outlook 2007 account? A filter, maybe? No. Of course, I could set up different pop3 mail boxes for each address. And that won't help, either, because all the messages are in the same mailbox. No matter which account you were to use to connect to that mailbox, Outlook would download all the messages in it, no matter which address was the receiving address, because POP protocols don't wotrk on receiving address. The client says, "How many new messages do you have?", the server says "I have X new messages," and the client says, "OK, send me X new messages.". No option in there at all for specifying "send only the new messages received by address a@b". If Outlook could do that, then you'd just create a separate account in Outlook for each address and Outlook would receive only those messages received by a particular address, which would cause Outlook to reply using that receiving account. But I would like to have one single outlook account, *if possible*, not several and have to change between them. Does this all make sense? Can it be done? Nope. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
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On Mon, 17 Dec 2007 09:53:38 -0500, "Brian Tillman"
wrote: Mike Barnard wrote: The domain, which I shall call for now "thedomain.com", can have as many pop3 logins as I wish. But to simplify things I have just one at the moment. I'll call it "domainpop" for now. It's a matter of seconds to add new ones, that is no problem. And, as far as Outlook is concerned, all these aliases are actually the same account. The million pound question: Is there a way to force the 'reply to' address to change depending on the 'to' address on the email that I received, staying within the a single outlook 2007 account? A filter, maybe? No. Of course, I could set up different pop3 mail boxes for each address. And that won't help, either, because all the messages are in the same mailbox. No matter which account you were to use to connect to that mailbox, Outlook would download all the messages in it, no matter which address was the receiving address, because POP protocols don't wotrk on receiving address. The client says, "How many new messages do you have?", the server says "I have X new messages," and the client says, "OK, send me X new messages.". No option in there at all for specifying "send only the new messages received by address a@b". If Outlook could do that, then you'd just create a separate account in Outlook for each address and Outlook would receive only those messages received by a particular address, which would cause Outlook to reply using that receiving account. But I would like to have one single outlook account, *if possible*, not several and have to change between them. Does this all make sense? Can it be done? Nope. Sigh. So much for MY christmas pressie from you then. ![]() didn't hold out much hope, really. |
#4
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I have a slight variant on Mike's situation. I've created a separate pop3
box for each recipient (info@..., mike@... etc), and then set up separate accounts in Outlook (all under the same personality) so that each account downloads mail from its specific pop3 box into its own Inbox. That all works fine, and I can view all the inboxes in the same window. I can also set up signatures and reply-to addresses for each account, so you might think that the problem would be solved. But for some reason, Outlook imposes a global default on the reply-to address (as far as I can see), so you have to select manually the signature/reply-to for each reply. It's no big deal doing this, especially if you set the global default to the account with most traffic, but it does seem strange that you cannot apply a default depending on which account inbox you are replying from. That would give the same reply-to functionality as Thunderbird. "Brian Tillman" wrote: Mike Barnard wrote: The domain, which I shall call for now "thedomain.com", can have as many pop3 logins as I wish. But to simplify things I have just one at the moment. I'll call it "domainpop" for now. It's a matter of seconds to add new ones, that is no problem. And, as far as Outlook is concerned, all these aliases are actually the same account. The million pound question: Is there a way to force the 'reply to' address to change depending on the 'to' address on the email that I received, staying within the a single outlook 2007 account? A filter, maybe? No. Of course, I could set up different pop3 mail boxes for each address. And that won't help, either, because all the messages are in the same mailbox. No matter which account you were to use to connect to that mailbox, Outlook would download all the messages in it, no matter which address was the receiving address, because POP protocols don't wotrk on receiving address. The client says, "How many new messages do you have?", the server says "I have X new messages," and the client says, "OK, send me X new messages.". No option in there at all for specifying "send only the new messages received by address a@b". If Outlook could do that, then you'd just create a separate account in Outlook for each address and Outlook would receive only those messages received by a particular address, which would cause Outlook to reply using that receiving account. But I would like to have one single outlook account, *if possible*, not several and have to change between them. Does this all make sense? Can it be done? Nope. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
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#6
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![]() "Brian Tillman" wrote: Jonathan Williams Jonathan wrote: I have a slight variant on Mike's situation. I've created a separate pop3 box for each recipient (info@..., mike@... etc), and then set up separate accounts in Outlook (all under the same personality) so that each account downloads mail from its specific pop3 box into its own Inbox. That all works fine, and I can view all the inboxes in the same window. I can also set up signatures and reply-to addresses for each account, so you might think that the problem would be solved. But for some reason, Outlook imposes a global default on the reply-to address (as far as I can see), so you have to select manually the signature/reply-to for each reply. It's no big deal doing this, especially if you set the global default to the account with most traffic, but it does seem strange that you cannot apply a default depending on which account inbox you are replying from. That would give the same reply-to functionality as Thunderbird. Do these accounts all truly access separate server mailboxes, or are thay actually aliases of each other (i.e., do you use the same credentials in the account definitions to access the server(s))? -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] Yes, they are accessing separate mailboxes operating under different domain names. Having now spent the weekend getting to grips with Outlook, I find that actually the correct reply-to address & signature are indeed picked up according to the inbox I am replying from. It is only a new email which prompts for the reply-to account to use, as you would expect. So I'm happy. Thanks Jonathan Williams |
#7
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![]() "Brian Tillman" wrote: Jonathan Williams Jonathan wrote: I have a slight variant on Mike's situation. I've created a separate pop3 box for each recipient (info@..., mike@... etc), and then set up separate accounts in Outlook (all under the same personality) so that each account downloads mail from its specific pop3 box into its own Inbox. That all works fine, and I can view all the inboxes in the same window. I can also set up signatures and reply-to addresses for each account, so you might think that the problem would be solved. But for some reason, Outlook imposes a global default on the reply-to address (as far as I can see), so you have to select manually the signature/reply-to for each reply. It's no big deal doing this, especially if you set the global default to the account with most traffic, but it does seem strange that you cannot apply a default depending on which account inbox you are replying from. That would give the same reply-to functionality as Thunderbird. Do these accounts all truly access separate server mailboxes, or are thay actually aliases of each other (i.e., do you use the same credentials in the account definitions to access the server(s))? -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] Yes, they are accessing separate mailboxes operating under different domain names. Having now spent the weekend getting to grips with Outlook, I find that actually the correct reply-to address & signature are indeed picked up according to the inbox I am replying from. It is only a new email which prompts for the reply-to account to use, as you would expect. So I'm happy. Thanks Jonathan Williams |
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