Jan skrev: (messageID: <news:3bd51d3d$0$749$edfadb0f@dspool01.news.tele.dk>)
> Hvad er forskellen på IMAP og POP3 ?
Jeg har sakset lidt fra 
http://www.rdlab.carnet.hr/NetLab/faq/client.html
       With POP (Post Office Protocol), mail is delivered to a shared
   server, and a personal computer user periodically connects to
   the server and downloads all of the pending mail to the
   "client" machine.  Thereafter, all mail processing is local to
   the client machine.  Think of POP as providing a
   store-and-forward service, intended to move mail (on demand)
   from an intermediate server (drop point) to a single
   destination machine, usually a PC or Mac. Once delivered to the
   PC or Mac, the messages are typically deleted from the POP
   server.
   IMAP is a client-server mail protocol designed to permit
   manipulation of remote mailboxes as if they were local.  With
   IMAP, mail is again delivered to a shared server, but the mail
   client machine does not normally copy it all at once and then
   delete it from the server.  It's more of a client-server model,
   where the IMAP client can ask the server for headers, or the
   bodies of specified messages, or to search for messages meeting
   certain criteria. Messages in the mail repository can be marked
   as deleted and subsequently expunged, but they stay on the
   repository until the user takes such action.
-- 
Kasper Damkjær
http://www.damkjaer.net