On Sat, 2014-01-25 at 19:19 +0000, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> On Sat, 2014-01-25 at 11:36 -0500, Eric Beversluis wrote:
> > "but it certainly seems like packets are going astray." How would
> > anything that Airport or Mac Mail does cause packets to go astray? It
> > seems like somehow Mac Mail is continuously sending and thus clogging
> > the mail-receiving ports (995).
> 
> That doesn't make a lot of sense. I presume we're talking about 2
> different client machines (seems logical since one is Fedora and the
> other a Mac, unless Fedora is running on a VM). So how could one of them
> clog the POP *download* port of the other, which isn't even directly
> connected to it? Unless the Mac is running some kind of DOS bot. Do you
> see any other network effects? Are ping times from the Fedora machine to
> the mail server affected when the Mac is on?
> 
> Also, looking back I see you're using Fedora 17. F17 went EOL about a
> year ago, so I'd recommend updating to F20 before proceeding. You'll at
> least get a newer version of Evo and the problem might go away.

THat was at the start of the thread. Early on I upgraded to F19, but the
problems persisted.

> 
> Finally, are you the OP for this thread? You seem to be using two
> different mail accounts.
> 
> poc
> 
> poc
> 
Well I've rebooted the wirelss router and now things seem for the moment
to be going OK. But I've tried that in the past and either they didn't
fix or the problem soon reappeared after a certain amount of activity.

If it reappears I think I'll just update and upgrade my wireless
router. 

Thanks to all and hopefully this thread is finished.

EB

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