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How do I go back and read very old threads in Thunderbird? I know I can 
use the Web interface, but I prefer the news reader. Thanks.
Mike
 
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On 22/07/2018 09:27, Mike Horvath wrote:
> How do I go back and read very old threads in Thunderbird? I know I can 
> use the Web interface, but I prefer the news reader. Thanks.
> 
> 
> Mike
You could un-subscribe then when you re-subscribe you will be asked if 
you want to download all the headers. Do it one group at a time or 
overnight.
-- 
Regards
     Stephen
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On 22-7-2018 10:27, Mike Horvath wrote:
> How do I go back and read very old threads in Thunderbird? I know I can 
> use the Web interface, but I prefer the news reader. Thanks.
> 
> 
Have you checked your Account Settings for POV-Ray in Thunderbird? Go to 
'View settings for this account' and under POV-Ray go to 
'Synchronisation & Storage'. Check how you have set what has to be done 
with old messages (to recover disc space). Possibly you have put a limit 
there. Set to 'Don't delete any messages'. However, I think that you 
need to follow Stephen's advice too nonetheless.
-- 
Thomas
 
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On 22/07/2018 12:02, Thomas de Groot wrote:
> On 22-7-2018 10:27, Mike Horvath wrote:
>> How do I go back and read very old threads in Thunderbird? I know I 
>> can use the Web interface, but I prefer the news reader. Thanks.
>>
>>
> 
> Have you checked your Account Settings for POV-Ray in Thunderbird? Go to 
> 'View settings for this account' and under POV-Ray go to 
> 'Synchronisation & Storage'. Check how you have set what has to be done 
> with old messages (to recover disc space). Possibly you have put a limit 
> there. Set to 'Don't delete any messages'. However, I think that you 
> need to follow Stephen's advice too nonetheless.
> 
And backup your profile.
%APPDATA%\Thunderbird\Profiles\
-- 
Regards
     Stephen
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Thanks!
Now I just need to figure out how to get TB to turn URLs that are longer 
than one line into proper links.
Mike
On 7/22/2018 7:02 AM, Thomas de Groot wrote:
> On 22-7-2018 10:27, Mike Horvath wrote:
>> How do I go back and read very old threads in Thunderbird? I know I 
>> can use the Web interface, but I prefer the news reader. Thanks.
>>
>>
> 
> Have you checked your Account Settings for POV-Ray in Thunderbird? Go to 
> 'View settings for this account' and under POV-Ray go to 
> 'Synchronisation & Storage'. Check how you have set what has to be done 
> with old messages (to recover disc space). Possibly you have put a limit 
> there. Set to 'Don't delete any messages'. However, I think that you 
> need to follow Stephen's advice too nonetheless.
>
 
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On 07/23/2018 07:24 PM, Mike Horvath wrote:
> Thanks!
> 
> Now I just need to figure out how to get TB to turn URLs that are longer
> than one line into proper links.
> 
> Mike
> 
Share your secret...
One of my fantasies is to get the newsgroups to emit an url for a
message that is less than 200 chars long.
-- 
dik
Rendered 328976 of 330000 (99%)
 
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On 7/23/2018 8:43 PM, dick balaska wrote:
> On 07/23/2018 07:24 PM, Mike Horvath wrote:
>> Thanks!
>>
>> Now I just need to figure out how to get TB to turn URLs that are longer
>> than one line into proper links.
>>
>> Mike
>>
> 
> Share your secret...
> 
> One of my fantasies is to get the newsgroups to emit an url for a
> message that is less than 200 chars long.
> 
> 
Yeah, that is an annoyance. I have to manually copy and paste those 
types of URLs.
Mike
 
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On 07/23/2018 08:54 PM, Mike Horvath wrote:
> On 7/23/2018 8:43 PM, dick balaska wrote:
>> On 07/23/2018 07:24 PM, Mike Horvath wrote:
>>> Thanks!
>>>
>>> Now I just need to figure out how to get TB to turn URLs that are longer
>>> than one line into proper links.
>>>
>>> Mike
>>>
>>
>> Share your secret...
>>
>> One of my fantasies is to get the newsgroups to emit an url for a
>> message that is less than 200 chars long.
>>
>>
> 
> Yeah, that is an annoyance. I have to manually copy and paste those
> types of URLs.
> 
> 
> Mike
Another weird thing about TB is most times, my new posts don't wrap. I
wondered if other people saw them like that. I assumed no. But when I
reply like this, it is wrapping while I type.
And *another* weird thing, often the povray newsgroup links work even if
the last 3-4 characters wrap.  I always do the tinyurl thing to help my
fellow povers avoid the wrapping nonsense. (which is annoying because it
anonymizes the url. I'm really sending you to pornhub.)
-- 
dik
Rendered 328976 of 330000 (99%)
 
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Am 24.07.2018 um 04:17 schrieb dick balaska:
>>> One of my fantasies is to get the newsgroups to emit an url for a
>>> message that is less than 200 chars long.
...
> And *another* weird thing, often the povray newsgroup links work even if
> the last 3-4 characters wrap.  I always do the tinyurl thing to help my
> fellow povers avoid the wrapping nonsense. (which is annoying because it
> anonymizes the url. I'm really sending you to pornhub.)
The anatomy of a link to a message in the web interface is as follows:
    http://news.povray.org/<GROUP>/message/<ID>/#<ID>
where <GROUP> is the name of the newsgroup, and <ID> is the message ID
(always starting with `%3C` and ending with `%3E`, which represent the
characters `<` and `>`, respectively).
Note that the last portion of the URL is a /fragment/ (recognizable by
the leading `#`), i.e. a specific location within the referenced page,
instructing the browser to scroll down on that page accordingly.
If only the fragment portion is garbled, the web page will still load
fine; the browser will just not scroll down to the fragment because it
can't find it. (As a matter of fact, in practice that's even the
behaviour when the fragment `#<ID>` is present and intact: The
single-message pages do not have any fragments at all.)
This also means that you can strip the fragment portion from the URL
entirely to make it shorter.
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On 7/24/2018 4:38 AM, clipka wrote:
> The anatomy of a link to a message in the web interface is as follows:
> 
>      http://news.povray.org/<GROUP>/message/<ID>/#<ID>
> 
> where <GROUP> is the name of the newsgroup, and <ID> is the message ID
> (always starting with `%3C` and ending with `%3E`, which represent the
> characters `<` and `>`, respectively).
The '<' and '>' are superfluous IMO, but it's probably not worth the 
trouble of removing them.
Who is the webmaster, by the way?
Mike
 
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