I don't know how to implement it, but I do know that it was ( fairly 
easily ) done by a UNIX guy I used to work with.
  Mail stuff (I.E. smtp requests?) can easily be redirected to one place 
while http requests are directed to another.

   ( wouldn't it have made more sense to contact your ISP in the first 
place ? )

At 10:13 AM 09/24/2001 -0400, you wrote:
>I am looking for any recommendations you cf-talk guys might have
>  about e-mail services for hosting the e-mail for my domain.
>
>I share a co-located server with a few other developers for work
>  we do on the side and we have been running our own mail server
>  for awhile, but because we use this box for development
>  purposes, it isn't up 100% of the time.  I'd like to continue to
>  do my own web hosting, but would like to move my e-mail hosting
>  to another provider.  The ISP that hosts our server does all our
>  DNS so I should be able to have my mail directed to another
>  server.
>
>I would like to be able to add and manage my e-mail accounts over
>  the web, be able to access mail from a typical POP3 client, but
>  also have a web-based interface for checking mail when I'm
>  without my laptop.
>
>Any suggestions or recommendations you'd like to share - I'd
>  appreciate it.
>
>Thanks
>
>Jackson Moore
>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
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