triger49, on 29 December 2009 - 02:23 AM, said:
what I was hoping for was a way to import them into a searchable database of some sort.
Hi Jake,
Emailchemy
http://www.weirdkid....hemy/index.html might help you.
1) I had used Emailchemy v1.5.9.1 under Win98SE to convert emails from old Netscape Communicator v4.8 to old Eudora v3.05 (of 1997). Older Emailchemy v1.5.9.1 works fine on my 10-year-old Inspiron laptop with 512MB RAM; for the latest version the author's website recommends a minimum of 1GB of RAM.
2) Just recently I have used Emailchemy to disinfect old virus-infected Eudora email .mbx files; Kaspersky Anti-Virus is not able to disinfect individual emails in a .mbx container, you can only delete the whole mailbox containing thousands of emails.
Emailchemy can convert an .mbx mailbox file into "RFC-822 message folders" (actually .txt files), one .txt file for each email message. To clean up an infected mail box, I:
- converted the .mbx file with Emailchemy to about 4000 individual RFC-822 message .txt files
- checked with Kaspersky the extracted 4000 .txt files (some viruses/trojans already got deleted during the conversion)
- opened the infected .txt message files with TextPad (Notepad doesn't work; WordPad doesn't work either, it reacts to embedded MS stuff) and either manually deleted trailing junk in the .txt file (i.e. the trojan), or I just deleted the infected .txt file
- after all infected stuff was removed, I converted with Emailchemy the 4000 message files (.txt) back into a Eudora .mbx file.
The basic approach is:
email container (e.g. Eudora .mbx) ==> convert to many individual .txt message files ==> fiddle around with the individual .txt message file ==> convert back to email container
BTW, the email container re-created from individual .txt message files is about 20-30% bigger than the original email container, but it works.
Infected messages are a major problem when archiving emails, virus scanners are just not up-to-date. For example, a couple of years ago, Kaspersky didn't find anything bad in an old .mbx mail box. Now, with the current virus signature update, Kaspersky detects some infected messages, which it didn't find earlier. For easy future disinfection of email messages containing currently not yet detected trojans/viruses it may be preferrable to archive emails as individual RFC-822 .txt message files and put them into a .rar file. I don't want to archive infected stuff.
3) Emailchemy has also helped me repair corrupt Eudora mailbox files (old Eudora v3.05 would just become "not responding" with them), by letting me extract the messages of a mailbox as .txt files. I could then edit with TextPad the individual .txt files. All my corrupt .mbx Eudora mailbox files were caused when old Eudora v3.05 somehow created inside of the .mbx file a corrupt email message containing many email messages, instead of a single message.
The mailbox corruption was cleaned up after I:
- extracted with Emailchemy the bad message file as a .txt file
- manually split it up in TextPad into many files with only a single email message
- saved the split up .txt files under any name (e.g. msg001.txt etc)
- converted the split up files plus all the other good RFC-822 message files back into a single .mbx file.
4) You could create a searchable database of your emails by converting your emails with Emailchemy into thousands of little RFC-822 .txt files, and then simply use Win98 Find.
You are using Foxmail v5.8, which is not on the list of email file formats which Emailchemy can read; you may have to export your email files in a format which Emailchemy can read.
Quote
The problem is, any export / Save as.. results in a file with the export date.... not the creation date or date received
Emailchemy assigns the date (YearMonthDay-Time) as the initial part of the file name of each RFC-822 .txt file, e.g. "20030629-1355 eBay Item Purchase Titan Notebook Cooler Item 1234567890.txt". Message .txt files, which don't contain the date (e.g. .txt files manually repaired/extracted from a corrupt Eudora .mbx mailbox file where the date was somehow missing) are assigned the current date by Emailchemy.
5) One of my long, ongoing projects is to archive old stuff, like old floppies, old CDs/DVDs, old photos, old LPs. So archiving old emails could become also part of this archiving effort, although there is no time-pressure to archive old emails. Unlike old floppies, old CDs, old photos or old LPs, old emails don't decay.
This post has been edited by Multibooter: 09 March 2010 - 05:26 AM