yes it is, thats exactly the kind of thing james is good at :-)

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Diego Castillo [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> Sent: Thursday, February 14, 2002 4:36 PM
> To: 'James Users List'
> Subject: James as a mail proxy
> 
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> I am new to James and have spent some time reading the documentation and
> the mail archives, but unfortunately I have not found the answer to my
> question.
> 
> My scenario is as follows:
> I have an application that sends mail to undetermined recipients via my
> ISP mail server. I need to *make up* the content of some mails before
> they reach my ISP, but I can't do this by modifying or configuring the
> application.
> 
> Basically, the idea would be to:
> 1. Install James close to my application.
> 2. Set my application to use James as SMTP server.
> 3. Use the Mailet API to intercept outgoing mails and perform the
> content transformation I require (e.g. HTML -> text).
> 4. Set James so that it forwards the resulting mail to my ISP's SMTP
> server.
> 
> Is this scenario feasible?
> 
> All suggestions are welcome!
> 
> 
> Diego
> 
> 
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