1.	Thanks
        2.	Original question
        3.	Suggestions
1.	Thanks:
                Dan Pritts  -  danno@aa.fv.com
                Birger A. Wathne - birger@Vest.Sdata.No
                Rachel Polanskis - grove@zeta.org.au  
                Peter L. Buschman - plb@concentric.net
                Rich Kulawiec - rsk@itw.com
                Martin Forssen - maf@math.chalmers.se
                Scott J. Bertin - bertins@db.erau.edu
                Carl Carpenter  -  carlc@kivex.com
2.	Original question:
	>
	>I am looking for mail applications for Sun platforms bouth Solaris 
	>and SunOS, that work with pop server. 
	>Netscape client is good but it takes a lot of memory (10 MB) and 
	>we arelooking for other solutions.
3.	Suggestions:
        From: Dan Pritts  -  danno@aa.fv.com
                there's some sort of pop client on ftp.qualcomm.com
                you should also look at pine from ftp.cac.washington.edu, 		it doesn't
use pop, but it can use IMAP server (also at 		same site) or
/var/spool/mail
        From: Birger A. Wathne - birger@Vest.Sdata.No
                Try Sun's IMAP server (the successor of POP, with support 		for
manipulating your email on the server. Saving to 			folders on the
server, etc) and Sun's IMAP based email 			client available for Solaris,
windows, etc.
                Search for it at Sun's web server, www.sun.com. It was 30 		day try
and buy when I fetched it. I'm sending from this 		combination now. Has
some very nifty features, like 			'views'.
        From: Rachel Polanskis - grove@zeta.org.au    
                PINE and ML both have pop and IMAP support built in, so you 		can get
running really quickly.
                You can find most ofthese at a Sunsite, even the linux 			mirrors!
        From: Peter L. Buschman - plb@concentric.net
                Instead of using a client that only works through pop, like 	
Netscape, you might want to look at programs like popclient 		or
fetchpop that download a user's mail from a pop server 		and save it in
the system's
                normal mail spool.  That way, any normal unix mail program 		can be
used by the user.  I use this approach and it works 		very well.
                A number of programs / scripts that can do this can be 			found at:
                ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/Mail/pop
                Although the directory is for Linux, most of the source is 		readily
compiled on other platforms, and I have had no 			trouble under Solaris
2.5.1.
        From: Rich Kulawiec - rsk@itw.com
                fetchmail by going to Eric's home page and following
                the links:
                http://locke.ccil.org:80/~esr/
        From: Martin Forssen - maf@math.chalmers.se 	and 
                Scott J. Bertin - bertins@db.erau.edu
                I use TkRat.  Check out 					
http://www.dtek.chalmers.se/~maf/ratatosk/
        From: Carl Carpenter  -  carlc@kivex.com
                You might want to give ML a looking over. It is an X11 mail 		client 
that handles imap, pop3, pop2 and even nntp (I			never tried the	news).
                http://www-smi.Stanford.edu/projects/imap/ml/
-- Harel ---\||/ David Harel Software Systems (`') _____||_____ Phone/Fax: 972 6 6920738 (]____ ____[) Cellular: 052 476555 | | Snail Mail: Amuka / \ D.N Merom Hagalil | /\ | 13802 _| | | |_ Israel <___) (___> Email: Hareldv@netvision.net.il
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