Hi, I read about your samba vs mutt problem on the samba mailing list. Unfortunately I accidently deleted the digest before replying so I can't include a copy of your original question. I don't have a good answer to your original question, but have an alternative. The answer, if you want to try something new, is IMAP. This is an alternative mail client protocol to the standard POP3 protocol. The big advantage it provides is the ability to keep all of your mail folders on the server instead of having them on the machine on which you are reading your mail. By doing this, you can read your mail locally on the machine your mail is delivered to, read it from another machine on your local lan, or even read it from over the Internet, and still be able to delete, file, rename, reply, etc. from all of these locations. This is the system I am using. I have a Unix box (Sun Solaris in my case) where my mail is delivered. I normally use the text based email program "pine" is read my mail while I am logged onto the Unix box interactively. However, if I get an attachment, want to easily send an attachment, or am dealing with an html enhanced email message, I just go over to my Win98 pc and use Netscape Messenger to read my same inbox as pine does. I can also do the same thing over the Internet from remote locations. It works great! I don't know if linux comes with an IMAP daemon, Solaris didn't. The pine source code came with an imap daemon that works the sameway as the pop3 daemon. I think the daemon is available separately as well. Here are two URL's: ftp://ftp.cac.washington.edu/pine/pine4.10.tar.gz ftp://ftp.cac.washington.edu/imap/imap.tar.Z The imap daemon that comes with pine will work with any imap capable email client, so don't feel you have to convert to pine. I switched to pine from elm because elm did not support imap. A friend told me about mutt and the web page says the current version has "some" support for imap. I have not tried it yet, but I would guess it supports enough for most needs. There are several PC email clients that support imap as well. These include Netscape, Eudora, Outlook, and I am sure others. I would highly recommend this combination. It works great for me. Good Luck, John DeWolfe DeWolfe Enterprises, LLC http://www.dewolfe.com