Very cool about the gmail relay service. Will have to look into that.

Question though - are your servers not on private address space? Are they then 
NAT/PAT'ed to communicate out?



Sent from my iPhone

On May 10, 2017, at 12:09 AM, Charles Goldsmith 
<wo...@justfamily.org<mailto:wo...@justfamily.org>> wrote:

AFAIK, RTMT cannot be authenticated.

I wouldn't trust a windows solution, especially a free/low cost one.

To me, an SMTP appliance is no better than me installing linux and setting it 
up, unless it is smart enough to auto update itself and protect itself (install 
and forget).  I'd hate for one of my customers to have issues with an email 
server getting compromised and spamming out their network.

But, you pointed me to just googling an smtp appliance, which I didn't think to 
do, and found this article at google : 
https://support.google.com/a/answer/176600?hl=en which details SMTP relay to 
google with various options.  Has anyone used this and how reliable is it?

Good thoughts, but let's see if someone else has ideas.

On Tue, May 9, 2017 at 10:20 PM, Lelio Fulgenzi 
<le...@uoguelph.ca<mailto:le...@uoguelph.ca>> wrote:

Some things that pop into mind:

- can rtmt be configured with authenticated smtp server? That would/should 
allow you to use any mail system (including off prem if routable rtmt host)

- Google smtp appliance. I tried doing this a while ago and found some options.

- look for a Windows solution. Windows is easier to keep patched. *tongue in 
cheek* there are usually windows experts around. As long as the o/s is patched 
and the f/w is set so that only rtmt host can connect, should be ok. You can go 
so far as to deploy on a small laptop with flash drive with  wired, wireless 
and 3/4G  connectivity to ensure that messages always go out. Battery backup 
helps in case of power outage.

Sent from my iPhone

> On May 9, 2017, at 10:31 PM, Charles Goldsmith 
> <wo...@justfamily.org<mailto:wo...@justfamily.org>> wrote:
>
> Does anyone have thoughts on how to relay RTMT alerts for small customers who 
> have no local SMTP server?
>
> I know I can spin up a linux box, but then maintaining it, many customers 
> don't have the knowledge and there is always a risk when leaving something 
> like this unmaintained.
>
> Thanks!
> Charles
>
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