Receiving messages – Unitech PA962 User Manual

Page 36

Advertising
background image

36

Unitech PA962

You can also work offline. Once you’ve downloaded new message headers or

partial messages, you can disconnect from the server and then decide which

message to download completely. The next time you connect, InBox automati-

cally downloads the complete messages you’ve marked for retrieval and sends

the messages you’ve composed.

Receiving Messages

Messages received by synchronizing with your desktop computer and through

remote connections appear together in your InBox. Double-tap a message to read

it.

When you connect to your Internet mail service, the InBox downloads only the first

100 lines of each new message to the InBox folder by default. No mail attach-

ments are downloaded. When you synchronize with your desktop computer, only

the first 50 lines of each new message remains on the mail server or your desk-

top computer.

You’ll need to download a full message before you can view its attachments.

You can mark the messages that you want to retrieve in

their entirety the next time you synchronize or connect to

your mail service. Select the message, tap Service, and

then tap Retrieve Full Copy. The icons in the InBox

messages list give you a visual indication of the message

status.

Specify your downloading preferences when setting up

the service or selecting your synchronization options.

You can change them at any time.

=

To change InBox delivery options for mail synchronization: in the Mobile

Devices window on your desktop computer select your WinCE icon, click
Tools

, and then click ActiveSync Options. Select Message and then click

Options

. (For the Options button to be available, you must have previously

enabled message synchronization.)

=

To change InBox delivery options for remote mail: in InBox on your PA962, tap
Service

and then tap the service name. Then tap Service again and tap

Properties

.

וֹ כּ מּף

ףץ٪ّ ٠מּَ ِ ٩٭۶ףוֹ ٭٩ץף ێ ۖ ףףףףףףףףףףף

wwwِpdffactoryِcom

Advertising