I have often wondered; What is the big deal with Imap? Why bother, and what is it anyways? Well, I have your answer.
For those of us who don't know, the basic unlikeness between the two are where your email messages are stored once they are sent to you. With Pop 3 all your messages are stored on your computer. Now, this can be a good thing and a bad thing. It's nice to have all your emails on your computer because they open the emails faster than having to go to an email server to open them. The downside is that they're stored on your computer so if you're a pack rat and keep all your emails, then your filling your hard drive up with unnecessary junk that just takes up space. Imap shop them on an email server. If you use more than one computer to passage your email, you would probably want to use Imap. Your email is synchronized on all the computers that you have set it up on. Imap is also a great way to backup your email and contacts because it is secured on a remote mail server and not on your computer.
Imap Email
Pop3 is faster and works better with outlook. The default location of your email will be on your computer and not on your email server. If you remember to backup your contacts and leading emails and you are using only 1 computer to receive email, then Pop3 is your best option.
Syba SATA II PCI-X 4 Ports Host Raid Controller Card Review
Syba SATA II PCI-X 4 Ports Host Raid Controller Card Feature
- Silicone Image Sil3124 Serial ATA I / II to PCI-Express Host Controller Card
- 4 Channels PCI-X Serial ATA II Host Raid Controller Card with Silicon Image SiL3124 chipset
- Compliant with PCI-X Specifications Revision 1.0a
- Supports Raid function: 0, 1, 5, 10
- Supports Serial ATA II: Port Multiplier 1.0 Specifications
List Price : $41.60
Price : $39.99
Syba SATA II PCI-X 4 Ports Host Raid Controller Card Feature
- Silicone Image Sil3124 Serial ATA I / II to PCI-Express Host Controller Card
- 4 Channels PCI-X Serial ATA II Host Raid Controller Card with Silicon Image SiL3124 chipset
- Compliant with PCI-X Specifications Revision 1.0a
- Supports Raid function: 0, 1, 5, 10
- Supports Serial ATA II: Port Multiplier 1.0 Specifications
Syba SATA II PCI-X 4 Ports Host Raid Controller Card Overview
4 Channels PCI-X Serial ATA II Host Raid Controller Card with Silicon Image SiL3124 chipset. Specification: PCI-X Interface. Compliant with PCI-X Specifications Revision 1.0a. Fully Plug and Play compatible. SATA II Interface. Intergraded Serial ATA Link and PHY logic. Compliant with Serial ATA 1.0 and Serial ATA II Extensions to Serial ATA 1.0 Specifications. Supports Serial ATA Generation 2 transfer rate of 3.0Gb/s. Supports Raid function: 0, 1, 5, 10. Supports Serial ATA II: Port Multiplier 1.0 Specifications. Backward compatible to SATA 1.0 Specification. Supports four independent Serial ATA channels. Independent Link, Transport, and date FIFO. Independent command fetch, scatter/gather, and command execution. Supports Legacy Command Queuing (LCQ). Supports Native Command Queuing (NCQ). Supports Non-zero offsets NCQ. Supports Out of order data delivery NCQ. Supports FIS-based switching with port Multipliers. System Requirement: Driver supported: MS Windows 2000/XP/Vista, Linux, Mac OS 10.4xRelated Products
- Syba SY-CAB40007 Molex 4 Pin to 2x 15 Pin SATA Power Cable (5.5 Inches)
- StarTech.com 18IN SATA HARD DRIVE CABLE ( SATA18RA1 )
- Western Digital 2 TB Caviar Green SATA Intellipower 64 MB Cache Bulk/OEM Desktop Hard Drive WD20EARS
- Syba SD-SATA2-4IR PCI SATA II 4x Internal Ports RAID Controller with SIL3124 Chipset
- Seagate Barracuda LP 2 TB 5900RPM SATA 3 GB/s 32 MB Cache 3.5-Inch Internal Hard Drive ST32000542AS-Bare Drive
Imap Vs Pop3
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