AOpen AX45-8X Max Bedienungsanleitung Seite 131

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Windows, Networking and Software
FAQ, Tips, Hints, and Wisdom for Windows 98x/XP
David Gok 131
connected. Moreover, Pimmy manages newsgroups and has a special chat feature designed to be used
among colleagues in your office.
Check out also Calypso at http://www.calypsoemail.com/faq/index.htm
Mail Servers
Office Mail Server http://members.nbci.com/eu3eu/
I can recommend you a tiny program, Office Mail Server, designed specially to that purpose. It is free, and
I tested it successfully a few months ago. You may configure multiple external mailboxes (e.g., at your ISP,
your company, yahoo, Hotmail, etc.), multiple local users, complex filtering rules, and dial-up schedule. It
retrieves mail from your ISP (and other external mail servers, if any) and distributes it among local users'
mailboxes according to given rules. Then it acts as a POP3 server in your LAN or on the standalone
machine. (In the latter case, use the server name "localhost" or address 127.0.0.1) Each NS user may access
his particular mailbox at that server (not at the ISP one) with his unique name/password and get only his
personal mail. It may also provide mail exchange between local users and centralized mail sending - but
you may also configure your clients to send mail directly to ISP, bypassing the program. The product is
very compact, consumes little resources, and can be kept running in the background continuously with no
adverse effect upon other applications.
ArgoSoft Mail
I recommend that you run your own private closed mail server at least for outbound SMTP, and configure
your mail clients to send mail out through it. This will bypass SBC's servers, get the mail out immediately,
and forever avoid being ORBS-listed if configured properly.
For Win9x and above, I use the www.Argosoft.com
free Mail Server (AMS) with continued success. It's a
good personal use server: it's small, easy to install, and implements blocking of unauthorized relaying.
The free version sends one message at a time, while the shareware version ($28) is multithreaded for higher
performance.
After download and installation, configure AMS for outbound mail service using these four easy steps:
1. In AMS Options | General tab:
Enter a working nameserver IP address. Pacbell's
206.13.29.12 is ok until you find a better one.
Check 'Load Server at Windows Startup'
Check 'Automatically Start the Server' - important!
Check 'Allow Relay' (don't panic, see (2))
Check 'Hide Passwords In Logs'
2. In AMS Options | SMTP Authentication tab:
Check 'Enable SMTP Authentication'
In 'SMTP User Name', make up a username
like "localsmtp", and in 'SMTP Password',
make up a long, hard password, and confirm it.
Remember it.
3. For additional security, turn off unused services:
in AMS Options | Ports tab, set POP3 port to 0,
and set Finger port to 0.
4. In Outlook Express Tools | Accounts | Mail | Properties | Servers,
check "My server requires authentication", and
enter the information from (2) above.
To use as a mail receiver, you'll need to add Users (with passwords), add Local Domain Names (LDN)
(such as 127.0.0.1, localhost, mail, or whatever you put in your \windows\hosts file or on your network's
nameserver), enable POP3 (see (3) above), and set mail clients to fetch mail from AMS at whatever LDN
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