Sorry, the Seattle rain is getting to me. Meant to say set it to outbound.
Forward all of the messages from that remote IMS to your local bridgehead or whatever 
mail router you have
set up for internal &  external routing.



On Wed, 22 Aug 2001, Jennifer Baker wrote:

> Install an Internet mail connector in the local site and set it to inbound
> only.
>
> On Wed, 22 Aug 2001, Walbert, Bryan (Bryan) ** CTR ** wrote:
>
> > We have an Exchange enterprise of about 10 000 mailboxes.  We have a mixture
> > of clients ranging from Exchange clients to Outlook 2000 to Netscape IMAP
> > clients using SMTP to relay outbound email.  Currently, in some of our more
> > remote sites we have some of the IMAP users who need a local relay host, to
> > prevent slowing of the client while sending mail.  We have narrowed it down
> > to 2 solutions.  I would like some external opinions as to which is the
> > better solution. (more reliable, more secure, more efficient) Our enterprise
> > is Exchange 5.5 SP 4 running on Windows 2000 Advanced server (SP1 on the way
> > to SP2)
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > Option 1.  Install a local IMS and allow relaying of mail traffic.
> >
> > Option 2.  Use the IIS SMTP service installed on the box to relay all SMTP
> > traffic to the backbone relay hosts.
> >
>
>
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Jennifer Baker
Fluke Corporation
http://www.fluke.com
http://www.flukenetworks.com
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]


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