--
john mcwilliams
Try the WebMail addon: http://webmail.mozdev.org/index.html
Yahoo.com or Yahoo.ca? Those don't work. All others do. I use yahoo.es
and it works perfectly in any email program or POP.
--
Peter Taylor
Gmail? Free POP3, IMAP and Forwarding. And excellent spam filtering.
If Yahoo! Mail has free forwarding, they could always have it forwarded
to their Gmail account.
Actually, Yahoo.ca does work. I have several of them.
pop.mail.yahoo.com
Port 995
SSL/TLS
normal password
user name = full email address
These settings DO NOT work for yahoo.com addresses; you need to pay the
premium to connect via POP. I guess the Canadian market is too small for
Yahoo to get excited about.
No, they hoped to do it for all their domains but it flopped so they didn't.
--
Peter Taylor
> Try the WebMail addon: http://webmail.mozdev.org/index.html
+1
Works fine over here.
--
s|b
After reading, 2-3 months ago, of a posted procedure by means of which
you _can_ get free Yahoo accounts POP-enabled, even in USA,
I tested and verified that it worked, as of when I tried it,
although minor modifications were necessary
to adjust for re-arranged Yahoo settings:
Click on the April 2009 article about
"Yahoo Mail free POP access"
I don't bother using it in real life, however,
since Gmail is IMO superior in every respect,
including free POP or even IMAP access
(intelligently designed to suit a primarily web-based architecture
and superior storage architecture).
Surely Yahoo knows all about this, and had done nothing
to alter it even as of early July 2010.
Another article on the above site explains how to leverage
free Yahoo POP a bit further,
to first transfer all the Yahoo mail to Gmail.
--
--
John McWilliams
--
John Mcwilliams
> > Works fine over here.
> Which Yahoo! are you using?
yahoo.com (free; if not, I would be using POP)
> And am I right in thinking that the webmail
> addon does not work on the US unpaid version?
Should work though. Have you read the instructions?
<http://webmail.mozdev.org/setup.html>
You need WebMail /and/ WebMail Yahoo.
However, I just tried to update WebMail 1.3.9 to 1.3.10 and I'm getting
some error about corrupt download. They picked this up on their (Yahoo)
support group:
<http://groups.google.com/group/thunderbird-webmail-extension/browse_frm/month/2010-09>
So I hope it will be fixed soon...
--
s|b
> However, I just tried to update WebMail 1.3.9 to 1.3.10 and I'm getting
> some error about corrupt download. They picked this up on their (Yahoo)
> support group:
>
> <http://groups.google.com/group/thunderbird-webmail-extension/browse_frm/month/2010-09>
>
> So I hope it will be fixed soon...
I uninstalled 1.3.9, restarted and then installed 1.3.10 and now it's
working fine.
--
s|b
Oh, man! I got a yahoo.com instead of .ca figuring that the .com would
POP. It didn't. Got the webmail add-on and it NEVER worked. Not even
once. Don't use the Yahoo address or the Webmail add-on any more.
BIG THUMBS UP for Hotmail which is free AND lets you POP. (and BIG
THUMBS DOWN for Hotmail which puts my OWN emails into Junk and doesn't
let me turn off Junk filtering. It's always something...)
--
Malcolm
"They should know they're the Grateful Dead now." -- Phil
Yeah, but your email is _theirs_ -- forever! G is evil.
>> Gmail? Free POP3, IMAP and Forwarding. And excellent spam filtering.
>
> Yeah, but your email is _theirs_ -- forever! G is evil.
Get real. Like no free email service from anyone else is any different.
What is evil is those who spread FUD.
Terry R.
--
Anti-spam measures are included in my email address.
Delete NOSPAM from the email address after clicking Reply.
>> Gmail? Free POP3, IMAP and Forwarding. And excellent spam filtering.
>
> Yeah, but your email is _theirs_ -- forever! G is evil.
You can transfer all your "gmail" elsewhere at any time
(plus your contacts), thanks to both the free POP and free IMAP access.
They also have a general policy on always making migration possible,
away from Google services (sorry I haven't time to find the direct URL).
--
>> Get real. Like no free email service from anyone else is any different.
>
> Incorrect. Microsoft says if you don't use your email for 6 months they
> throw away your mail and account.
>
And you believe everything MS says? No wonder you write stuff like
this. They state they close your account.
>> What is evil is those who spread FUD.
>
> Or keep your email forever. And so many other things.
Bye.
I set up Yahoo using your settings and it worked perfectly. I had
removed Yahoo from Thunderbird after they no longer allowed a free
account with POP.
Now it's back. Thank you.
I also thank you, even though I've had no success. I am guessing that
there's something about being onna Mac.
--
john mcwilliams
I don't use MAC but I suspect you need to check your email
configuration again because once the settings are sent to Yahoo
servers, it does not matter whether you have MAC or Windows
because yahoo uses Unix/inux to process the instructions.
hth
John McWilliams via TB wrote:
>
> I am guessing that there's something about being on a Mac.
Should make no difference to the Yahoo web site,
nor to its mail servers.
By the way, I once again re-enabled my own Yahoo (USA) free account
for POP access, using the same reference as already posted on Sept 28
(I chose "Asia") and tested it successfully with TB:
http://groups.google.com/group/mozilla.support.thunderbird/msg/24af4d6e484724af
--
Finally! Thanks for hanging in there, but a couple of anomalies held me
up: The UK did not work for me; after setting, logging out, resetting,
etc, I couldn't get the page to show where you can choose to POP....
consequently, I believe, I was unable to get the customization in T-Bird
to set up for an IMAP server.
However, once I chose Asia, I could choose to POP the mail, (did not see
a choice for IMAP) then I created a new account, and was able to
customize on the IMAP with port 993. I suspect that you and others
who've already POPed your accounts were able to switch to IMAP because
the settings on the Yahoo server already let you POP. So, for someone
going in new to create an IMAP in TBird, I bet they have to first choose
POP settings.
Thanks again.
--
John McWilliams