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e-mail
from any account
I have thousands of e-mail
messages in my corporate Outlook in-box, and thousands more in Gmail
and in my ancient Hotmail account. MailStore Home is a free
program that can archive them all locally, and display those
archives in an interface that reads like your Outlook in-box.
Why use it? You can clear
away old messages and attachments, but easily search to find them
again when that inevitable moment arrives. Until universal offline
in-boxes like Yahoo's Zimbra Desktop start addressing
consumers on a wider scale, Mail Store Home is also a good way to
read mail offline in areas of spotty Wi-Fi, or to use as a de facto
message backup.

MailStore Home's search pane
includes attachments and repeat queries.
(Credit: CNET/Screenshot by
Jessica Dolcourt)
MailStore Home can archive a
pretty impressive list of mail servers, including Microsoft Outlook
and Outlook Express, Microsoft Exchange, Thunderbird,
SeaMoney, Gmail, Windows Live Mail, IMAP, POP3, and .EML files.
It largely resembles Microsoft Outlook's layout with a side bar on
the left--complete with folder tree and search field--and a large
reading pane on the right. There are also some small navigational
icons along the top that you can use to jump to archiving, burning
archives to disk, advanced search, and tools.
The program's management is
straightforward. Buttons on the start screen replicate the
navigational icons up top, and there are also some stats, like your
oldest and newest messages and the total size of your archive. When
you archive an in-box, a wizard walks you through special
configuration steps and lets you enter folders to archive or exclude
if you want some backed up, but not all. MailStore Home skips your
spam, trash, and junk folders by default, and it checks for
duplicate messages while going about its business.
E-mail search is one feature
of note. Using the advanced search screen, you can drill down to
specifics--dates, folders, even the contents of e-mail attachments.
You can also search for messages with or without attachments, and
save queries to rerun the report at a later time. MailStore Home
supports Boolean search terms. When you've found your message,
you'll have management options like opening, saving, and exporting.
Search was speedy and accurate in our tests. Though processing took
a few long seconds, we were able to reply to archived Gmail messages
via Outlook.
The freeware version for
consumers doesn't do it all. There's no auto-archiving or scheduling
for starters, so archiving is a manual activity. Initial scanning
also takes a long time, and subsequent archives of the same in-box
(click "run" to rearchive) start over from scratch instead of
offering you the option to pick up from the most recent message
date. We'd like to see more, and more nimble, filters on that left
sidebar, like to filter only e-mails with attachments. MailStore
Home also restricts you to three account profiles, which isn't
especially useful if you've got more active accounts than that.
Despite these drawbacks, MailStore Home offers a fine free solution
for storing e-mail from multiple in-boxes and searching through the
archives. |