![]() I don't know if there are a version that works with modern operative system versions, but this reference could help you to further research and find what you are looking for. An old version of Eudora put all the email messages attachments in a local folder.Use a POP / IMAP desktop email client that includes a feature that automatically add the attachments to local folder There are at least one answer about this on this question.Use Google Apps Script to send the attachments to Google Drive, then use the Google Drive desktop client to automatically download the attachments to your computer's desktop. Gmail doesn't offer a built-in feature to download the attachment of several emails "at the same", but there are several ways to achieve the desaired result. Personally, I now recommend using the standalone, dedicated tool by GearMage. Want more detailed instructions? You can try that link above. ![]() If you are sending the PDF as an email attachment also complete EMAILSUBJECT and EMAILBODY. Once it's been added you can right-click and choose "Extract Selected Attachments to." from the menu Copy the script into code.gs in the script editor (Tools > Script editor), paste the template ID number into TEMPLATEID value (between the s) and add a file name for the new PDF in PDFFILENAME if you don’t want to use the template name.To Thunderbird add the AttachmentExtractor extension from here.I am adding the following in case you decide to go with my pre-edit answer, so that all parts of this answer can "stand on their own": It also works with Yahoo, Hotmail and almost any other mail server that supports POP3 or IMAP. ![]() I've started using it myself and I am very pleased with the results. The tool Mail Attachment Downloader from GearMage does exactly what you requested and also provides a great deal of flexibility. Since writing the above, I have discovered a much simpler & easier to use solution. With a simple modification, you can download only the attachments you want (in Step 3, just choose the appropriate folder/label or other subset). ![]() I noticed the other answers describe how to do this to Google Drive, but you said you wanted them downloaded to your (I presume local) file system.Ĭheck the description here for a detailed guide to using Thunderbird for this purpose. ![]()
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