On Fri, Aug 25, 2000 at 09:13:08AM -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>  
> If my pop3 client I want to use to send mail is outside of our firewall on the 
>internet, then I must access its POP3 port via our proxy.

This sounds strange. You cannot access the POP3 port of a POP3 client (email 
application),
only that of a POP3 server (at your ISP). Clients can only connect to servers, not the
other way around.

Also, POP3 is not used to send mail, only to receive mail. For sending mail you use
SMTP.

If you are running a POP3/SMTP email application (client) inside of your firewall, and 
want to
access a POP3 server (to fetch your email) or an SMTP server (to send email) outside 
of your
firewall, then you may have to connect through a (SOCKS) proxy. See below.

If it is the other way around (you are outside of the firewall with your POP3/SMTP 
client,
and the POP3/SMTP server you are connecting to is inside of the firewall), then you are
probably out of luck -- unless the sysadmin agrees to "punch a hole" in the
firewall for you.

> I am able to use our CERN(generic) proxy just fine to make HTTP connections, but was 
>wondering if REBOL was not doing so for POP3

CERN proxies do not support POP3 or SMTP. They can only be used for HTTP and (usually) 
FTP
and gopher. If you want to be able to access services other than these through a proxy
then you need a SOCKS4 or SOCKS5 proxy.

-- 
Holger Kruse
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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