An inefficient E-mail setup in a small office needs to be replaced with a 
better solution. I ask for your wise advice.

In a landscape architecture office, there are several Windows XP workstations 
for the architects to do their design work with. One of those workstations has 
a common E-mail client installed which works with one E-mail account provided 
by the ISP. It receives from it using POP3 and sends to it using SMTP, as 
commonly done.

Some incoming messages are "adressed" to the office and some are "addressed" to 
the various architects ( There is only one E-mail address). Thus anyone who 
wishes to read his incoming messages and send messages needs to physically go 
and use the workstation with the mail client. This, if you haven't guessed 
already, it somewhat uncomfortable for daily work in the office.

The requirements are that all messages, inbox and sent, would be available to 
access from all of the workstations and that it would be possible to send 
messages from all workstations, also. This is still using the single account 
provided by the ISP.

I would appreciate it if I was described of a setup that should answer these 
requirements effieciently, including the protocols and software involved. I am 
willing to learn whatever skills required for this.

Any suggestions and comments about anything, including the phrasing of this 
message, are welcome and your help will be accepted with gratitude.

-- 
Dawn Light | שחר אור
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Phone number: +972 09 774 0646
ICQ UIN: 50866262
Windows Live ID (Formerly MSN): [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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