IMAP vs. POP3 E-mail Accounts

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Basically both IMAP and POP are different protocols for handling e-mail. Each has its own unique function and purpose. Protocol allows IMAP to deal with e-mail in a different way than POP does. POP is basically a flow through entity?it just passes on the information to you at your e-mail program. IMAP on the other hand, is interactive with your e-mail program. Let?s take a look at the uniqueness of both.



    POP



    POP stands for ?Post Office Protocol?. It works very simply. When the POP e-mail server receives e-mail it stores it on the server until you to request it. By simply opening your email program (e.g., Outlook) you request the e-mail from the server by pressing the ?Send? or ?Receive? button. The e-mail program in essence asks the server if there is any mail waiting. If there is, it tells the server to send it to you.



    When the POP server receives your request for mail, it sends the entire message to your e-mail program. Once you receive the email, the message is no longer stored on the server unless you specifically tell it to keep a copy.



    IMAP



    IMAP stands for ?Internet Message Access Protocol?. It allows you to download e-mails from the server to your e-mail program the same as POP does. However, the difference is that when you request your e-mail from the server it sends a copy rather than sending the entire e-mail. It keeps a copy of the e-mail on the server while simultaneously keeping a copy on your computer.



    You may be wondering what happens if you have certain messages on your local computer and IMAP has different messages on the IMAP mail server? IMAP has built in intelligence to handle this task. When you connect the IMAP mail server with your local computer, it senses that there are differences between the local computer and the mail server. It then synchronizes both so that they have the same information.



    For example, if you delete messages, compose more and have sent others, this information will be synced up with the IMAP server so that the IMAP server will delete the copies of the messages that were deleted. By the time you log off the IMAP server you have two complete copies of all of the e-mail tasks performed: one on the IMAP server and one on your local computer.


    Advantages

    POP
    IMAP

    Relatively straightforward
    Slower but more redundant



    Faster (sends your e-mails and gets e-mails from you)
    Keeps a copy of everything you do on the server



    The downside is that if you lose e-mails on your computer you have lost them forever (unless you have saved a copy on the server)
    The downside is that it takes up more space



    Compare Advantages

    POP

    IMAP

    Relatively straightforward

    Slower but more redundant

    Faster (sends your e-mails and gets
    e-mails from you)

    Keeps a copy of everything you do on the
    server

    The downside is that if you lose e-mails
    on your computer you have lost them
    forever (unless you have saved a copy on
    the server)

    The downside is that it takes up more
    space