how to delete account from thunderbird without deleting from server
I am lending a PC with Ubuntu and Thursderbird to a friend for a trial period. I want to delete two email accounts in Thunderbird without deleting same from the email server. The information in help seems to indicate that if I delete my accounts, those accounts will also be deleted from the server. This is not desireable - is there a way around this this? Thanks!
தீர்வு தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டது
The bit in blue above is a link to an article that explains this.
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Menu_differences_in_Windows,_Linux,_and_Mac
But as the mozillazine site often goes offline, I'l telll you that you need to look under Edit|Account Settings in the Linux version of Thunderbird.
However, you could click the account, right-click it, select Settings and then you'll be in the Account Settings page.
In Thunderbird, when in doubt, right-click. ;-)
Read this answer in context 👍 0All Replies (3)
Tools|Account Settings|{select the account}
At the bottom of the pane listing your accounts, look for Account Actions, and when you click that, look for and click on Remove Account.
Doing this removes the account from Thunderbird. It actually retains the data files associated with the account but removes the account entry and its settings. What's on the server remains untouched - well, at least that is my understanding. Can you provide a link to the help that suggested otherwise?
In theory, unless you encrypt your home folder, a savvy user could find the mail store in your profile and read it. You might want to go a step further and remove the entire profile.
Zenos மூலமாக
Sorry, but I don't understand your answer. I click on 'Tools' but I don't see any references to 'Account Settings'. Where is this?. I am running Ubuntu. Sandy
தீர்வு தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டது
The bit in blue above is a link to an article that explains this.
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Menu_differences_in_Windows,_Linux,_and_Mac
But as the mozillazine site often goes offline, I'l telll you that you need to look under Edit|Account Settings in the Linux version of Thunderbird.
However, you could click the account, right-click it, select Settings and then you'll be in the Account Settings page.
In Thunderbird, when in doubt, right-click. ;-)