For over ten years I’ve had the same yahoo e-mail address. There is a long list of important information, and I’m nervous having no copy of all this on my hard-drive.
In Outlook there was this whole process of creating folders on my c: and then I could pull them up again as long as I had a copy of outlook on my computer.
But how can I back-up the yahoo files? What if they went belly up, and the “software” was no longer available. How could I retain/access that information?
I do not think it should be difficult. Install an email client on your computer and use it to access your online email using either IMAP or POP3 (yahoo might want you to pay for this access). Then just move or copy to the local folders.
Aha! the power of searching the right terms, huh? I googled “e-mail client”, found Mozilla Thunderbird, and it led me through the rest in about five minutes.
I have always used an email client from the very beginning because I have always had quite a few email addresses and using a client allows using a single program to access all of them. I can’t imagine using web mail one by one. As long as my computer is running the email program is running and checks all accounts every few minutes. That’s how I have done it since the very beginning.
When I tell young people my e-mail address they kinda cock their heads and say “Huh? what’s Yahoo?” I tell them “It’s one step up from AOL.”
LOL!
So seriously though, are you saying that I just luckily happened upon the only one that would have worked? My account has been variously free and paid over the years, but is currently in “free” mode.
I am interested in this idea (downloading all my e-mails for posterity) for the same reasons as TruCelt. I use Firefox on an old version of Linux machine. Can I use Thunderbird as well with Linux to download my e-mails from Yahoo and/or Gmail? A lot of my e-mails (especially outgoing) have file attachments – mostly ZIP files. Do those get included too?
OK, I should have said SMTP. I generally use “POP3” to mean “POP3 & SMTP” as they go together for receiving / sending and then IMAP is a different thing on its own.
I had two Yahoo accounts. Only one of them let me use Tbird. Years ago Yahoo was updating their interface and rolled it out for testing in the UK only, and you could change your location to try it out. I did that and found out I could use POP3 with it. IIRC that was because the UK required all email accounts to be accessible with POP3. Unfortunately, a couple of months ago it refused POP3 access. Ah, well.