I'm sure they do, but not for residential accounts where everything's locked up 
tight. If I attempt to send
over 50 emails in any given hour, my email (in & out) gets turned off until I 
provide a satisfactory
explanation to a techie. Commercial accounts - which don't add speed or static 
ip's, but which do subtract the
port blockings - start at another $70/mo. 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of William Sanders 
/ EFG
Sent: Wednesday, June 13, 2007 1:49 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: BLAT success

Heya Lew -
is there any possibility your ISP can utilize a different port for pop3 / smtp? 
 port 25 is standard and
basic, but most hosts will allow for

***ALTERNATE PORTS****

Does your host have an alternate port?

Call em, ask em (or check their online *scant* FAQs section).

Mondo Regards [Bill]
--
You said, "How can I send to a blocked port? Their server does not use 
authorization. Neither of my off site
services allow me to run apps on them, they just host my web site & the other 
is web based email. OTOH, for
another $10/month my isp has agreed to unblock 25."
--
William Sanders / efGroup {rmv the DOT BOB to reply} VFP Webhosting? You BET! ->
http://efgroup.net/vfpwebhosting Failing dotNet Project? -> 
http://www.dotnetconversions.com



[excessive quoting removed by server]

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