Robert posted on Thu, 07 Feb 2013 21:17:07 -0500 as excerpted: > On my older system I am running KMail and I like it a lot. When I got > my new laptop I decided to install Kmail on it too. Problem is Kmail is > no longer like the old kmail, I know everyone is going to say it is > better but that is not my opinion. Any why after it was installed > kwallet was used to track the passwords for the different email > accounts. After giving it a go I decided that kmail2 was not for me and > I un-installed it. > > Now the issue I am having is I keep being prompted for the password for > kwallet to access my email. How do I get this to stop? Actually, I think you'll find a lot of folks agreeing with you. The new akonadified kmail is more problems than it's worth, and a lot of former kmail users are just that, FORMER kmail users, as a result. I know I am! But to answer your question... with the new akonadified kmail, it's not kmail that actually does the mail fetching, etc, it's akonadi. kmail2 is simply an akonadi front-end. So you uninstalled kmail, but that just uninstalled the frontend. Akonadi is still installed, and still configured to fetch your mail. You must kill the akonadi configuration as well, and /perhaps/ uninstall it too, altho depending on your distro and what other apps you have installed (in particular, any kdepim apps, korganizer, akregator, knode...), it may be a dependency of something else and you may not be easily /able/ to uninstall it. As I'm on gentoo and pretty much totally exterminated both akonadi and semantic-desktop from my system (gentoo's build-from-source, so allows an admin to configure support for optional features such as semantic-desktop and akonadi in or out at build-time, I've configured it OUT!) back in the kde 4.7 era, I've forgotten the details and can't simply run it and look, but the general idea is... Go to your akonadi accounts control (I think it's in kde settings, aka system settings, except they're kde settings, not system settings for the most part, no matter WHAT the name is) and find and delete the mail accounts. That should solve that problem. If you don't need akonadi running for anything else, you may be able to configure it not to start with kde, as well. That will save you the resources it uses. But as I said, it's used by several other programs in the kdepim module now too, and if you are using one of those, you'll probably have to let it run... at least until you can find alternatives to those programs and switch for them too. If that's not specific enough, hopefully someone else with akonadi still installed can get you something more specific, but that's the general idea, anyway... -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.