And you get the redundancy of Google backend
On Jun 17, 2011 8:15 PM, "Joseph Sinclair"
wrote:
> Google Apps free edition started with 100, dropped to 50 pretty quick, and
last month they dropped to 10 for the free edition.
>
> The corporate "Business" edition has always been unlimited users at
$5
Google Apps free edition started with 100, dropped to 50 pretty quick, and last
month they dropped to 10 for the free edition.
The corporate "Business" edition has always been unlimited users at
$50/year/user.
The paid version has 25G of storage per account which is available across all
Google
I've heard that rumor elsewhere. I was told $50/yr for all the email accounts
per domain and they were 8gig mail boxes.
I have not found those. I find a free Google apps with 10 accounts or the
$5/mo or $50/yr per account Google apps email accounts. I don't need Google
apps. I just need e
Odd. I get 100 mail boxes for free from google. I know they dropped it
but I thought the drop was to 50.
On 6/17/11, keith smith wrote:
>
> I think it is cheaper to spend $100 a month to let someone else run the
> email server than for me to take on all those headaches. I started down
> that pat
I think it is cheaper to spend $100 a month to let someone else run the email
server than for me to take on all those headaches. I started down that path
and found it was going to take a lot of on going effort. I's not the cost of
the server, it is the cost of time.
---
You get to that amount, and it's on the border of creating your own mail
server.
It's not terribly hard, it just takes security planning.
--Dan Lund
On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 9:35 AM, keith smith wrote:
>
> I looked at google and they are $5/mo or $50/yr per box. I need about 50
> mailboxes. T
Gonna toss out an obvious was there a hosts entry?
On Jun 17, 2011 8:49 AM, "Dazed_75" wrote:
> These machines are all gigabit ethernet and connected to the same gigabit
> switch with little network traffic at the time of these attempts.
>
> On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 6:23 AM, Joseph Sinclair
> wrote
Hi Larry,
On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 2:00 AM, Dazed_75 wrote:
> I tried to ssh from this machine to my laptop (ssh lapdog3) and find that
> ssh is somehow using an old IP instead of doing name resolution on th e name
> lapdog2 which now has a new lease on a different IP.
>
Where did you configure
I looked at google and they are $5/mo or $50/yr per box. I need about 50
mailboxes. That turns out to be $1,800 more a year. Rackspace has 10g
mailboxes and Google has 25g mailboxes. I'm guessing all else is equal. We
just need plain old mail. Nothing fancy.
Thanks!
--
netstat -na | grep LIST output?
ssh to localhost works?
iptables stop (just for the sake)
selinux?
On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 11:49 AM, Dazed_75 wrote:
> These machines are all gigabit ethernet and connected to the same gigabit
> switch with little network traffic at the time of these attempts.
These machines are all gigabit ethernet and connected to the same gigabit
switch with little network traffic at the time of these attempts.
On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 6:23 AM, Joseph Sinclair
wrote:
> A connection timed out usually occurs due to:
> 1) The ip address has no host (ping the same IP add
I have seen ssh timeouts on slow networks because of dns as well. ssh relies
on a reverse lookup and on very slow networks, I've seen the login process
timeout because of bad ptr data.
On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 9:23 AM, Joseph Sinclair
wrote:
> A connection timed out usually occurs due to:
> 1) The
A connection timed out usually occurs due to:
1) The ip address has no host (ping the same IP address, then use telnet to
connect to port 22)
2) tcp wrappers is dropping the connection (check /et/hosts.allow and
/etc/hosts.deny on lapdog3)
3) the firewall on lapdog3 is dropping the connection (ch
Ignore the original question. I checked lapdog2's IP in a terminal that was
logged into a different machine. The ssh was using the right IP but getting
this result and I cannot figure out why:
larry@hammerhead:~$ ssh -v lapdog2
> OpenSSH_5.8p1 Debian-1ubuntu3, OpenSSL 0.9.8o 01 Jun 2010
> debug1
I tried to ssh from this machine to my laptop (ssh lapdog3) and find that
ssh is somehow using an old IP instead of doing name resolution on th e name
lapdog2 which now has a new lease on a different IP.
1) How do I fix this?
2) Why does ssh use an old, apparently, stored IP?
--
Dazed_75 a.k.a.
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