Best bet is to pass it all to Exchange and let all users POP it from there.
Exchange 2000 was almost impossible to get it to forward email to an outside
POP3 server for user addresses it knew about.  Exchange 2003 may be better
about that, but having everyone POP the Exchange server is still the best
bet.

Darin.


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Jim Comerford" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, November 30, 2004 12:37 PM
Subject: [IMail Forum] OT: Mail Config Issue


This is slightly off-topic, but this is the best list I know for mail
issues.

We host a web site and mail for this client

They want to start using an internal Exchange Server and pass most of the
mail via Exchange Pop3 connector.
They have a few external users who for some reason MUST continue using pop3
This works fine on incoming mail.

If Exchange user however sends mail to an POP3 user on the same domain the
problem begins.

I'm not an Exchange person, so these answers may be simple, but I was unable
to find my answers...I have these questions:

Is there a way in exchange to tell it that certain users of that
domain are not internal and
they need to be sent back to our server?

Or if Exchange Server allows some users to connect via POP3 and get
their mail, I could route
all of their mail to Exchange and let those few users access it via
POP3 from Exchange?

Thanks for any direction here...
-Jim






To Unsubscribe: http://www.ipswitch.com/support/mailing-lists.html
List Archive: http://www.mail-archive.com/imail_forum%40list.ipswitch.com/
Knowledge Base/FAQ: http://www.ipswitch.com/support/IMail/


To Unsubscribe: http://www.ipswitch.com/support/mailing-lists.html
List Archive: http://www.mail-archive.com/imail_forum%40list.ipswitch.com/
Knowledge Base/FAQ: http://www.ipswitch.com/support/IMail/

Reply via email to