On Wed, 2001-11-14 at 21:06, Jim Meyer wrote:
> Ahh, you've struck another bit of fun I've been having. Neither my
> office or my ISP will allow relaying from outside their internal
> networks; however, both will allow relaying regardless of claimed source
> address from within their internal netw
On Wed, 2001-11-14 at 11:49, Jeffrey Stedfast wrote:
> But pretend you are setting up evolution to check mail from your work
> address and your isp mail address, you'd want both accounts to use your
> isp's smtp server
> and if your isp mail address was your default (as it would be if you
> were s
On Wed, 2001-11-14 at 19:49, Jeffrey Stedfast wrote:
> But pretend you are setting up evolution to check mail from your work
> address and your isp mail address, you'd want both accounts to use your
> isp's smtp server
It's a side point - I agree with the behaviour of 'guessing' an SMTP
server; b
On Wed, 2001-11-14 at 13:03, Jeffrey Stedfast wrote:
> It does, but I guess the logic is off a bit or something.
>
> I don't know, I can't find the problem...
I would love to help locate why this is happening if I can. I find it
very annoying. I have a POP account set up for home and an IMAP acc
But pretend you are setting up evolution to check mail from your work
address and your isp mail address, you'd want both accounts to use your
isp's smtp server
and if your isp mail address was your default (as it would be if you
were setting up your home box), then when you created your work accou
On Wed, 2001-11-14 at 11:35, Jeffrey Stedfast wrote:
> Yes, that is correct behavior - you can change the smtp server you use,
> it is just a good default to auto-set...don't you think?
>
I would think that since you are creating a new account (which may or
may not have knowledge of the other ac
Yes, that is correct behavior - you can change the smtp server you use,
it is just a good default to auto-set...don't you think?
Jeff
On Wed, 2001-11-14 at 14:16, Mike Strock wrote:
> On Wed, 2001-11-14 at 10:46, Jim Meyer wrote:
> > Hello!
> >
> > I'm having all sorts of fun with the fact that
On Wed, 2001-11-14 at 10:46, Jim Meyer wrote:
> Hello!
>
> I'm having all sorts of fun with the fact that Evo always uses your
> default account to reply from, even if the mail was sent to a different
> source account. It's particularly hitting me hard on this list, where
> I've got my personal a
I get the evo mailing list on my home e-mail account, [EMAIL PROTECTED],
via POP and also use IMAP to check my work account. I have my work
account set as the default. When I clicked "Reply to All" it chose to
send from my home account.
Chris Tooley
On Wed, 2001-11-14 at 12:46, Jim Meyer wrote
It does, but I guess the logic is off a bit or something.
I don't know, I can't find the problem...
Jeff
On Wed, 2001-11-14 at 13:46, Jim Meyer wrote:
> Hello!
>
> I'm having all sorts of fun with the fact that Evo always uses your
> default account to reply from, even if the mail was sent to
Hello!
I'm having all sorts of fun with the fact that Evo always uses your
default account to reply from, even if the mail was sent to a different
source account. It's particularly hitting me hard on this list, where
I've got my personal account on the list; as you may have guessed, it's
my work
11 matches
Mail list logo