Hi,
[clears throat, it's been a while]
If we don't make it easy for people to provide 'content' at the edge of the
Internet or put it in the bucket of 'business service' then people will
just put what they want to produce or communicate on centralised platforms
that make it easy for them to do
On 2020-11-05 17:53, Liam Farr wrote:
That would really depend on your ISP, for the likes of
Spark/Voda/Vocus/2Degrees etc and their various sub brands I would
say no it’s not, residential plans are low margin low-touch cookie
cutter products.
> Matching forward / reverse DNS is something that
On 11/4/20 8:30 PM, Richard Hector wrote:
> Is it reasonable to expect that a residential ISP, that provides a
> generated reverse resolution to a home IP address, will also provide a
> matching forward resolution that goes back to the same IP?
PTR records have always been useful for annotating
If what you have is a mass market account -
Myself and everyone else I know engineers these accounts to be cheap and
cheerful. This is what the vast majority of the market place wants.
Additionally, the vast majority of businesses do not host their own
email servers - they either use a cloud
I second what Liam said.
My personal policy is if its a business plan then yes, I will do those
sorts of customisations and others as required.
If its a standard plan I will consider it on a case by case basis. The
key here is what the clients total relationship value is. In context it
On 5/11/20 7:15 pm, Jasper wrote:
On Thu, Nov 05, 2020 at 06:33:42PM +1300, Richard Hector wrote:
I'm not trying to host here (in this case). My mailserver is at a hosting
provider, where all is good (barring the lack of IPv6 ...).
It's when my home machine connects to my mailserver that I see