OS X (now macOS) has been known over the years for its simplicity.
#WHERE DOES OS X MAIL STORE MESSAGES MAC OS X#
This will, 99% of the time, catch usernoted while it's temporarily not running, successfully delete the old database, and usernoted will make a new empty one when it starts again. On March 24, 2001, Apple released the first version of its Mac OS X operating system, noteworthy for its UNIX architecture. The internal storage of a Mac OS X Server is often not where. systems (such as Mac OS or Linux) and mobile platforms to access the email archive. To delete a message from the queue, the postsuper command must be used. I have 10.7 (Lion) still and the setting is in my preferences app, so I don't see why they wouldn't include this feature in 10.8 (Mountain Lion). I use it all the time at my friends house. One way is to delete all the messages in the inbox and then set up your email account to delete any. Mac OS X does have an internet sharing feature where it can share it's connection over WiFi. If you want to get rid of that file at a specific point in time, you can kill usernoted temporarily (it'll restart itself) and delete the file in one shot (run this as your user account, not with sudo): killall usernoted & rm ~/Library/Application\ Support/NotificationCenter/*.db Access to the MailStore Server-Archive - Outlook Add-in, Web Access. There are a few ways to get rid of mail storage on your Mac. Running the strings command on this file will show you a load of binary data, quite a few "NSSomething" class names, and yes, your iMessages, file paths, twitter and facebook notifications and anything else that was sent to Notification Center by an app or the system.
db file for your account, i've seen some that OS X apparently considered corrupt at one point, so they're called. ln -s /Library/Mail /Volumes/EncrypedImage/) onto an encrypted disk image made using Disk Utility if you'd like. The information required is the same as the online form, just presented through the initial start up process of OS X. The format is an sqlite database, and it can be found inside this folder: ~/Library/Application Support/NotificationCenter MailSmith stores it's data in /Documents/Mailsmith User Data/ To store you email in an encrypted location you can make an alias ( ln -s ORIGINAL DESTINATION - eg. The first time that you start up your Mac you will be invited to either register an Apple ID or enter your existing Apple ID if you already have one. This is an old question, but just in case someone stumbles on it and is specifically worried about the privacy implications of Notification Center, the answer is YES, OS X does keep a log of notifications on disk.