nDiScReEt wrote:
> I know I should try to do some work initially with this before asking
> the list for any inputs, but I ask that the list forgive me, I have a
> small network with one computer handling the routing and firewall. I
> would like to add another feature to my linux server. I would like it to
> have a mail server to collect all of my mail outside of my network and
> store it internally on it's media. My problem: I have one computer setup
> with all of my email being pop authenticated to mozilla's messenger.
> When I hop to another computer, I can get new mail on that system, but I
> can not access my old email because it is physically on the other
> computer. Then it came to me... why not have all my mail on one
> computer? Can it be done? Will it only produce the same effect as before
> or is there really a solution already out there that would allow me to
> read saved (old) and new email from any of my networked computers? That
> is why I didn't try yet first and choose to rather ask the linux
> mandrake community if there was such a program and if there is, how to
> configure it to work the way that I want? tia

altoine,

There are at least two ways to do this:

Assuming you only want to share mail among computer on your home LAN,
and they are all Linux, I think the simplest way is via a shared
directory.  Simply pick one of your computers to be the "main" computer
for the purposes of mail, then share your ~/home/mail directory (or
Mail, or whatever) on the network.  On the other computers, simply point
your mail client to that shared directory.  One disadvantage -- the
computer you designated as main should always be up when you are using
any other computer to look at mail, so all the mail gets to and stays in
that shared directory.  (I do this in Windows, and I even (for a short
period) read the mail on the Windows main computer using Netscape 3.0x
on Linux.)

The next way is somewhat similar, except set up an imap server on that
"main" computer, then read your mail from the other computers using an
imap client.

Randy Kramer

Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com

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