A little bit of help! Under your address, on the mail page, click the down arrow and you get "Settings". under "Email " (or "drafts"- Iforget) you can set the interval to save the draft up to 5 minutes. (The default is one minute). This is what is happening - cursor moves to top every time the the draft is saved. At least every 5 minutes is better than one minute!
Thank you for your tip and a good explanation of why this is happening, it has been driving me mad for a long time. I have followed your suggestion and let hope it improves composing an email.
Would you have any idea why my composed emails go into Draft rather than being automatically sent?
Thank you
I think what happens is: if it saves the draft just before you send the email, a copy will go into Drafts, but the email is then sent when you click Send. I've checked a bit and I find that a draft has been saved on an email without the closing with my name at the bottom, but the completed email is in Sent. Have a look and see if that's what is happening for you. Cheers, Judith
Thank you Judith, I'll have a look at that.
Linda
@chrisjpwrote:
but surely it is better and more convenient to use your mobile phone to access email when away from home or office base?
You are making the assumption that the concerned party a) has a "mobile phone", b) it's a smartphone, c) it's accessable, d) it's functional, e) there is adequate signal, f) the user is happy to pay the roaming charges and suchlike, where applicable, g) they like using a tiny screen and dinky 'keyboard', h) they are not physically or visually impaired, i) they have 'data' available, or, j) it hasn't been and won't be lost or stolen.
And in respect of an integrated email client, the party is set up for IMAP not POP.
Excuse me if that's stretching your imagination... 🙂
Thanks jgandjr. This has made the problem easier to live with, but I despair of BT. I reported the problem again. A guy from their email tech team phoned me back on my MOBILE and then said. "I need to send you a security code to your MOBILE for security reasons. He couldn't see the irony of sending the code to the phone that we were actually ready speaking on! Oh, and of course he had nothing to tell me other than that BT is working on it.
@DISRUPTED wrote:
@chrisjpwrote:
but surely it is better and more convenient to use your mobile phone to access email when away from home or office base?You are making the assumption that the concerned party a) has a "mobile phone", b) it's a smartphone, c) it's accessable, d) it's functional, e) there is adequate signal, f) the user is happy to pay the roaming charges and suchlike, where applicable, g) they like using a tiny screen and dinky 'keyboard', h) they are not physically or visually impaired, i) they have 'data' available, or, j) it hasn't been and won't be lost or stolen.
And in respect of an integrated email client, the party is set up for IMAP not POP.
Excuse me if that's stretching your imagination... 🙂
You are making the assumption that the concerned party a) has a PC or Laptop, b) & c) it's accessible, d) it's not been hacked and is functional, e) there is adequate wif signal or can connect to the Internet, f)& g)the user is happy to use some other person device if they are not using their home device. h) they are not physically or visually impaired, i) they have a functioning webmail account or, j) it hasn't been and won't be lost or stolen particularly if a laptop or if your house is broken into .
And in respect of an integrated email client, the party is not set up for IMAP or POP It is the users choice when setting up a decent email client/app.
Excuse me for stretching your imagination.
@gg30340wrote:
@DISRUPTEDwrote:
@chrisjpwrote:
but surely it is better and more convenient to use your mobile phone to access email when away from home or office base?You are making the assumption that the concerned party a) has a "mobile phone", b) it's a smartphone, c) it's accessable, d) it's functional, e) there is adequate signal, f) the user is happy to pay the roaming charges and suchlike, where applicable, g) they like using a tiny screen and dinky 'keyboard', h) they are not physically or visually impaired, i) they have 'data' available, or, j) it hasn't been and won't be lost or stolen.
And in respect of an integrated email client, the party is set up for IMAP not POP.
Excuse me if that's stretching your imagination... 🙂
You are making the assumption that the concerned party a) has a PC or Laptop, b) & c) it's accessible, d) it's not been hacked and is functional, e) there is adequate wif signal or can connect to the Internet, f)& g)the user is happy to use some other person device if they are not using their home device. h) they are not physically or visually impaired, i) they have a functioning webmail account or, j) it hasn't been and won't be lost or stolen particularly if a laptop or if your house is broken into .
And in respect of an integrated email client, the party is not set up for IMAP or POP It is the users choice when setting up a decent email client/app.
Excuse me for stretching your imagination.
And you are displaying what appears to be a degree of naivety leading you to make an invalid judgement. One thing that is relatively easy to access just about anywhere in the (urban) world is a connected PC or terminal, typically 'hardwired' and networked.
I realise that you were attempting to be 'equally pedantic' within your reply but in doing so, purposefully or otherwise, you chose a 'blinkered view', whereas, viewed with open eyes, reality is very different.
Finally, as I have no doubt you know already but to avoid misleading others, POP existed as the default (sole) 'set-up' long before EMAP and attempting to swing from POP to EMAP can result in lost history, so not everyone may have the easy choice you imply.
Have a great day! 🙂