On 8 September 2006, at 11:45, Jerold McAllister wrote:
hackmiester (Hunter Fuller) writes:
I'm old school. Back in my day, we didn't have the Internet we
have today, and our UNIX boxes could mail over the network we had
strung. I don't care what mail app I use. I just want to be able
t
hackmiester (Hunter Fuller) writes:
I'm old school. Back in my day, we didn't have the Internet we have
today, and our UNIX boxes could mail over the network we had strung. I
don't care what mail app I use. I just want to be able to have two boxes,
boxbox and snowy, for example, and be able
I'm old school. Back in my day, we didn't have the Internet we have
today, and our UNIX boxes could mail over the network we had strung.
I don't care what mail app I use. I just want to be able to have two
boxes, boxbox and snowy, for example, and be able to 'mail boxbox'
from snowy and vic
On Thu, Apr 22, 2004 at 07:00:48PM -0400, Peter Tokanel wrote:
>
>
> Alex de Kruijff wrote:
>
> >On Wed, Apr 21, 2004 at 07:33:51PM -0400, Peter Tokanel wrote:
> >
> >
> >>Hi,
> >>
> >>I am new to unix but I have managed to setup a home network using
> >>Free BSD. The
> >>FreeBSD box is a gat
On Wed, Apr 21, 2004 at 07:33:51PM -0400, Peter Tokanel wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am new to unix but I have managed to setup a home network using
> Free BSD. The
> FreeBSD box is a gateway/firewall/router for my Windows XP box and a
> wireless access
> point. The XP box can access the web just great
Peter Tokanel wrote:
Hi,
I am new to unix but I have managed to setup a home network using
Free BSD. The
FreeBSD box is a gateway/firewall/router for my Windows XP box and a
wireless access
point. The XP box can access the web just great using the shared
connection.
My problem is when email
Hi,
I am new to unix but I have managed to setup a home network using
Free BSD. The
FreeBSD box is a gateway/firewall/router for my Windows XP box and a
wireless access
point. The XP box can access the web just great using the shared connection.
My problem is when email is used on the Windows