Just a 'thinking outside of the box' direction ...

Over the years I've had trouble at various clients with sending email. 
I've changed how I send email from within my applications.  What I do is 
to connect and authenticate into a secure web page, and then post the 
email address, subject, and message body to the web page that then 
emails the message on my behalf.  Much easier to get email to work from 
a variety of secure environments.

$0.02.


On 09/08/2011 10:03 AM, Lou Syracuse wrote:
> Don't you just love that 'feature' on Charter - you can only send email from 
> your home (so they can tell you are in their IP range).    I take my notebook 
> everywhere and like to keep the history of my conversations and I don’t like 
> using their web-based email client.
>
> They have a little pocket of users where I live, and everyone who has them 
> hopes they sell out to Verizon someday.   Still, it is better than the DSL 
> line I used to have.  Do you use Charter for TV?   I kept my Directv for now; 
> that is getting pretty expensive but I can't survive without the NHL Center 
> Ice package.  lol
>
> Lou
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
> Behalf Of Tracy Pearson
> Sent: Thursday, September 08, 2011 5:10 AM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [NF] Optimum online not sending mail through port 25
>
> Michael Madigan<[email protected]>  wrote:
>
>> I have no idea.   I don't get descriptive errors from the device, all I
>> get from the NAS is "Failed to send message", the router gives no
>> message at all when it sends an alert and it fails, and the Health
>> monitor software gives "Failed to send alert" message too.   I haven't
>> tried setting up an email client on their remote desktop server, but
>> I'm really getting frustrated because I know it's on their end.
>>
>> What's happened in the past is Optimum will turn off port 25 to prevent
>> spam flowing through their system, but they swear our stuff is wide
>> open and I can send to another SMTP server that's built into the NAS.
>>
>> It's like their mail.optonline.net SMTP server now requires
>> authentication or something but they're telling me that's wide open as
>> long as we're physically connected to their network.
>>
>>
> Sounds like the charter.net service I have. As long as I'm in the defined IP 
> range they know as their own everything works. Did your dynamic IP change? If 
> not, it may be that the server you are connecting to is the backup server for 
> the main when it goes offline and it is misconfigured.
> Most of the time the administrators of boxes work in in a void from tech 
> support.

-- 
Kevin Cully
CULLY Technologies, LLC
678-929-7762
[email protected]


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