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I have never had this problem before, and I have
been using this NIC for a year or two. What NIC do I need to buy, if that
will fix the problem?
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, February 18, 2005 1:48
PM
Subject: Re: [IMail Forum] POP3 Timeout
for Dial-Up Customers
Absolutly. Imail tends to have NIC issues
that seem to be resolved by specific versions of 3COM NICS.
Darrell
------------------------------------------- Check out http://www.invariantsystems.com for
utilities for Declude And Imail. IMail/Declude Overflow Queue
Monitoring, SURBL/URI integration, MRTG Integration, and Log Parsers.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, February 18, 2005 11:50
AM
Subject: Re: [IMail Forum] POP3 Timeout
for Dial-Up Customers
Darrell,
Haven't moved the access servers, or even
unplugged/repluged them in. The only thing I did was add the mail
server to the same switch as everything else... Do you think the
switch could have some incompability problems with the NIC in my mail
server?
Thanks,
Bryan
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, February 18, 2005 6:43
AM
Subject: Re: [IMail Forum] POP3
Timeout for Dial-Up Customers
Bryan,
Have you checked the access servers
connection into the switch. Sounds like you might have a
speed/duplex issue.
Darrell
------------------------------------------- Check out http://www.invariantsystems.com
for utilities for Declude And Imail. IMail/Declude Overflow Queue
Monitoring, SURBL/URI integration, MRTG Integration, and Log
Parsers.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, February 18, 2005
12:25 AM
Subject: [IMail Forum] POP3 Timeout
for Dial-Up Customers
I am having a strange problem. Since
I moved my IMail server to the colocation facility that also houses all
of my dial-up connections, I have had a flood of calls with people's
mail getting hung on large attachments. The only thing that has
changed is the IP address of the mail server and the ethernet switch,
obviously. (No physical changes made to the machine.) I have
also had a ton of people saying Webmail is so slow they can't even use
it. This doesn't make ANY sense to me considering these dial-up
customers no longer have to go out through the public internet to get
their mail anymore, the server is right there plugged into the same
switch as the access servers... If anything, it should have gotten
considerably faster. I guess it's also notable to say that DSL
customers (and we in the office) have seen no problems whatsoever, even
with large attachments. It's just on dial-up.
If anyone can help at all, I'd appreciate
it. I have poured over the archives and not found anything to help
me.
Thanks,
Bryan
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