G
Gary
I work at a university that has a relationship with Google. More
specifically, people have the ability to create a Google Apps account and
have their email stored on Google's server rather than the one at the
university. For one thing, the storage capacity is much greater. I set up
my Google Apps account and set up an IMAP account for it in Outlook. I was
already using Outlook with a POP3 account. There is a program called the
Google Mail Uploader that allows a person to upload the messages from their
hard drive to the server. It preserves dates, folder structure, etc. Upon
completion of the upload, I checked Gmail's web client and the dates were
preserved on the messages. However, when I went into Outlook, the dates of
the emails display as the date that they were uploaded. If I "mouse over"
the messages or open an individual message it shows the date that I actually
received it. I'd like to know if there may be a way to display (in Outlook)
the date that I originally received the message and NOT the date it was
uploaded to Google's server. Thank you.
specifically, people have the ability to create a Google Apps account and
have their email stored on Google's server rather than the one at the
university. For one thing, the storage capacity is much greater. I set up
my Google Apps account and set up an IMAP account for it in Outlook. I was
already using Outlook with a POP3 account. There is a program called the
Google Mail Uploader that allows a person to upload the messages from their
hard drive to the server. It preserves dates, folder structure, etc. Upon
completion of the upload, I checked Gmail's web client and the dates were
preserved on the messages. However, when I went into Outlook, the dates of
the emails display as the date that they were uploaded. If I "mouse over"
the messages or open an individual message it shows the date that I actually
received it. I'd like to know if there may be a way to display (in Outlook)
the date that I originally received the message and NOT the date it was
uploaded to Google's server. Thank you.