Join the Mozilla’s Test Days event from Dec 2–8 to test the new Firefox address bar on Firefox Beta 134 and get a chance to win Mozilla swag vouchers! 🎁

Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

Mulongo oyo etiyamaki na archive. Tuna motuna mosusu soki osengeli na lisalisi

Does Thunderbird download emails from email server to it's own server?

  • 1 eyano
  • 1 eza na nkokoso oyo
  • 2 views
  • Eyano yasuka ya Zenos

more options

Does Thunderbird download and hols emails on it's own server, or wiat to pull emails from my email server till I log in and download them?

Does Thunderbird download and hols emails on it's own server, or wiat to pull emails from my email server till I log in and download them?

Solution eye eponami

There is no "Thunderbird server", so that resolves the first part of your question.

I'm not sure what you mean by "log in".

Thunderbird, by and large, fetches your messages from the server when you tell it, or you can set it to do so periodically.

To get your messages, it will need to know the email account's username (very often all or part of your email address) and the corresponding password. If you allow Thunderbird to store the password, you don't even need to think about "logging in" to the mail server.

I said "by and large" because with some IMAP servers, messages appear to be fed to Thunderbird as and when they become available, assuming that it is alive and on-line.

Tanga eyano oyo ndenge esengeli 👍 0

All Replies (1)

more options

Solution eye oponami

There is no "Thunderbird server", so that resolves the first part of your question.

I'm not sure what you mean by "log in".

Thunderbird, by and large, fetches your messages from the server when you tell it, or you can set it to do so periodically.

To get your messages, it will need to know the email account's username (very often all or part of your email address) and the corresponding password. If you allow Thunderbird to store the password, you don't even need to think about "logging in" to the mail server.

I said "by and large" because with some IMAP servers, messages appear to be fed to Thunderbird as and when they become available, assuming that it is alive and on-line.