This isn't my specialty, but passing it along in case anyone else is
interested.
--
John F. Eldredge -- j...@jfeldredge.com
Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot
drive out hate; only love can do that. -- Martin Luther King, Jr.
--- Forwarded message ---
Of course outside servers can be blacklisted. That's why I recommend
using a larger service like gmail or yahoo mail (both of which can be set
up to send email from your own domain) for email service. There's really
no reason to do otherwise.
On Tue, Jul 28, 2015 at 8:31 AM, John Eldredge
Gmail had been setting the from to whichever account you’re using to
authenticate as when sending. This may or may not cause issues depending on
what you’re doing.
--
Jon M
On July 28, 2015 at 8:45:10 AM, Michael Chaney (mdcha...@michaelchaney.com)
wrote:
Of course outside servers can be
Outside servers can be blacklisted as well. My personal domain shares its
mail server with other domains hosted by the same provider. I recently
needed to mail something to a person at Dell, and had my message bounce
because my shared mail server's IP address was blacklisted. I ended up
1. You need to first get the server cleaned up, *then* try to get removed
from blacklists. When they see you asking again next month they'll be far
less likely to remove you.
2. Cleaning up the server requires determining how people got in - probably
bad PHP or Perl scripts. Cleaning the server
Thank you for your input. If anything I ask seems vague, it's likely my lack
of familiarity.
T-mobile. America's First Nationwide 4G Network
Michael Chaney mdcha...@michaelchaney.com wrote:
1. You need to first get the server cleaned up, *then* try to get removed from
blacklists. When they
There are good reasons to run your own mail server, but they are very
particular situations. For example, if you're running a law firm, you
might not want Uncle Sam to be able to subpoena your mail provider.
This is a reason for it to be in-house. And if you're going to do
this, you need to have
Thank you, that makes sense.
1st two email providers that come to mind are google and yahoo ... any other
suggestions please.
T-mobile. America's First Nationwide 4G Network
Tilghman Lesher tilgh...@meg.abyt.es wrote:
There are good reasons to run your own mail server, but they are very
I use 11 for web host and mail provider. Not free but fairly low cost,
depending on what you want. I have been using them for years but I am also
exploring Amazon Web Services. I have not discovered an email service in
particular but they sure have lots of other services available. I don’t know
I was recently looking for email hosting providers and here are a few I found
that looked interesting:
1. Rackspace
2. ZoHo
3. Microsoft (Exchange Online, Office 365)
4. Registrar (NameCheap, GoDaddy, etc.)
5. Shared hosting provider (BlueHost, DreamHost, Hostgator)
6. Atmail
7. Fastmail
8.
I was recently looking for email hosting providers and here are a few I
found that looked interesting:
1. Rackspace
2. ZoHo
3. Microsoft (Exchange Online, Office 365)
4. Registrar (NameCheap, GoDaddy, etc.)
5. Shared hosting provider (BlueHost, DreamHost, Hostgator)
6. Atmail
7. Fastmail
8.
I'm a big fan of Google Apps. I've been using it for Watkins, for the last
several years and have transitioned several of my contract clients to
Google Apps. It is the best hosted (or non-hosted) email system I've ever
administered.
I agree with the prevailing opinion here, that if you don't
I have used hosted Exchange with a few customers and have NOT had a good
experience with any hosted Exchange system, so far. I believe that they
CAN be run well, if you have a good company, keeping an eye on things,
keeping the system updated and checked, etc. I have so far not found a
hosted
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