I also have a number of customers that roam. But I fail to see why roaming
customers could not use their home email addresses.

When on the road, all they have to do is set their smtp server address to
the smtp server of the provider they are connected to (i.e. AOL), and leave
everything else alone. 

Their emails go out through AOL's server, but have their home address (@L7.net) 
as
the return, and they still use their home inbox to retreive their mail. How 
does 
roaming prevent them from using their home address? 

Additionally, how does the blocking of outbound port 25 connections from your 
dialup
IP ranges relate to the above scenerio? The blocking of dynamic IPs from running
their own smtp servers is the focus of this thread.

I'm still willing to assume I'm missing the point here. :)

-Alan


>i have a ton of customers that roam, and to use their @L7.net e mail address,
>there is obviously no way they can use an aol mailserver for this.
>(however, aol firewalls all of that kind of stuff, so the mail does get out
>eventually because of they way they do it, but it really kinda sucks)

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