Tag Archives: email

That’s right, folks. After the grueling 72hr dovecot-to-gmail (Google Apps) migration ~1.5 years ago, it’s that time of the decade where we are going to do it in reverse!

In fairness to Google, their migration API back then was weak (or non-existent?).  Mails have to be sent one by one via SMTP.  Lucky for us, Gmail-to-IMAP isnt that painful, thanks to imapsync.

imapsync is a tool for facilitating incremental recursive IMAP transfers from one mailbox to another. It is useful for mailbox migration, and reduces the amount of data transferred by only copying messages that are not present on both servers. Read, unread, and deleted flags are preserved, and the process can be stopped and resumed. The original messages can optionally be deleted after a successful transfer.

Usage is very simple:

./imapsync –host1 imap.gmail.com –port1 993 –user1 user@gmail.com –passfile1 /home/user/passwordfile –ssl1 \

–host2 mail.domain.com –port2 993 –user2 user –passfile2 /home/user/passwordfile –ssl2

It’s safer to use –passfile than –password so that your password does not show in ‘ps’, in case there are other users in the server.  imapsync is written in perl and requires additional modules:

Mail::IMAPClient
IO::Socket
IO::Socket::SSL
Digest::MD5
Digest::HMAC_MD5
Term::ReadKey
Date::Manip

Your IMAP folders may not appear on your mail client. You may have to manually subscribe to your folders.

mail2web.com offers free email based on Microsoft Exchange. By “Exchange”, I also mean contacts and calendar synchronization. Webmail is through an ad-laden Outlook Web Access (OWA).

Note that this service doesn’t only apply to iPhones. It should integrate nicely with Windows Mobile phones. I’ll update this entry as soon as I have the time to boot up my old WM5 phone. If you dont have an iPhone or a WM, mail2web.com still will play nicely with your Outlook/Entourage.

Just configure your iPhone like this and you’re good to go.  Be sure to select Microsoft Exchange from Settings -> Mail,Contacts,Calendars -> Add account…

Note: The server field should contain mobile.exchange.mail2webcom. Sorry about that :)

PRO(s):

* FAST! Compared to Mobile Me’s “push” email, this one takes the cake. I use this email for email notifications from social networking sites.

* FREE!

CON(s):

* No server-side filters (like the ones in Yahoo! mail)

If you just want push email, mail2web is for you. Mobile Me is still nice, if you need a web gallery, iDisk, and if you dont mind shelling out $99/yr.