email: POP or IMAP
POP
email vs IMAP emailMost
people view their email from a website. They log on
to yahoo or
maybe hotmail if
they're kinda retarded or if they’re more
informed, maybe gmail, and
then view from their web browser. But there’s a
better way. If you have an email client, which you
probably do – Outlook on Windows (why are you on
Windows, though?), or Mail on the Mac – and your
email provider has POP or IMAP access as an
option, why not just set up the mail client to log
in to your account for you? This way, you save the
steps of having to navigate to a website, log in,
then find your inboxes or whatnot. Now, you simply
start your client up, and it’s all there! Easy as
pie. What’s more, you don’t’ have to ever
actually
quit your mail
client; leave it running, and periodically it will
check for new mail for you and inform you of its
arrival, which is nice.
This is especially useful if you have more than one
email address you access. For instance, I have at
least seven email addresses I access daily, each
serving a different function. I have one that serves
this site, one that only friends and family know of,
one that’s a throw-away from web forms, one that is
for “work” and… well you get it. Anyway, I start up
Mail, and it takes care of getting all my emails for
me, every 15 or so minutes.
There’s a catch, though. You see, there’s two
different ways that you can have your mail accessed,
and the two behave quite differently. They each have
benefits & drawbacks, so if you have the choice
it might come down to being informed. How are they
different?
POST
OFFICE PROTOCOL (POP)
POP works
essentially by downloading your email to your
machine. Your email client logs in, queries the email
server, and downloads your email for viewing. This
means that you will have a local copy of each and
every email on your machine.
INTERNET
MESSAGE ACCESS PROTOCOL (IMAP)
IMAP is
different. With IMAP enabled, when you start your
client, it again queries the server, but this time
instead of downloading the message from the server,
it is essentially just acting as a window to the
messages. When you view an IMAP email, you’re peering
through a window into the email server, where the
email really is.
PROS AND CONS
The upside
of the IMAP setup is that you are not wasting disk
space on your machine with emails. So depending on
how many emails you have, this could save a lot of
disk space. Another positive is that should your
computer crash or otherwise be incapacitated, your
emails are still safe on the email server. And also,
you have the ability to keep your emails synced
across machines. The downside is that since you're
just viewing the emails, if you are away from the
internet you will be unable to download any
attachments or sometimes, even view old messages. The
other less-likely downside – though it did
happen at least once
recently that
I’m aware of – is that if the email server crashes
& burns, you could potentially lose all of
your email data with it.
POP has almost equal and opposite pros and cons. POP
means storing your emails locally on your machine,
but that means that you are able to access them at
all times, regardless of whether or not you have an
internet connection. Also, though you have the chance
of losing all your emails if your hard drive goes
kaput, if you are backing up regularly – like you
should be – you’re insulated from this as well. And
you never have to worry about those who serve your
email losing it themselves!
This comes to a head for me because recently, one of
the main channels I use for email access – google’s
gmail – added in the option of doing either
POP
or IMAP;
usually you get one or the other.
Anyway, I have been using their email access via POP.
I prefer POP, because the way I see it, my emails are
MY emails, I don’t want to “rent” them from an email
provider. Yes it means storing my emails locally, but
in this age the space they take up is so miniscule as
to be rather unimportant, archives and all. And with
gmail’s almost-limitless server space, you can
actually get the benefits of the IMAP experience –
having your email on the server. If you initiate a
POP email account and specify that you want the email
server to keep a copy of all emails on the server,
they will be there regardless of whether local
catastrophe hits your machine.
Anyway, long story short I prefer POP. All of the
arguments I see in favor of IMAP usually revolve
around the data security & synchronized machines
arguments; but if you don’t delete the messages from
the server if you do POP, then you can actually
achieve almost the same results, but with the added
benefits of being able to “own” your messages, and/or
access already-downloaded content whenever you want,
internet access or no.
I really don’t see the benefit of IMAP, outside of
businesses being able to control/regulate/read
through all the emails of their employees at any time
in a local manner. If that doesn’t pertain to you,
then really it’s more a question of whether you’d
rather rent, or own?
I prefer ownership.
Peace.