RE: Queueing incoming mail

2001-12-10 Thread Joe Pochedley
- From: Ed Crowley [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Sunday, December 09, 2001 1:08 PM To: Exchange Discussions Subject: RE: Queueing incoming mail You could install the IIS SMTP Service between your Internet and the Exchange Server. See the FAQ Appendix H (I believe it is) for more information. (c

RE: Queueing incoming mail

2001-12-10 Thread Thomas Di Nardo
It will hold as much mail as you have disk. Tom. -Original Message- From: Joe Pochedley [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday, December 10, 2001 12:06 PM To: Exchange Discussions Subject: RE: Queueing incoming mail Ed, That sounds great. Will the IIS SMTP service care about

RE: Queueing incoming mail

2001-12-09 Thread Ed Crowley
Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 1:09 PM To: Exchange Discussions Subject: RE: Queueing incoming mail -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 www.tzo.com, and firms like them, offer a store-and-forward service. I guess there is some service out there for you. Also, if they can do

RE: Queueing incoming mail

2001-12-09 Thread Ed Crowley
You could install the IIS SMTP Service between your Internet and the Exchange Server. See the FAQ Appendix H (I believe it is) for more information. ©2000 Ed Crowley MCSE+Internet MVP kcCC+I® Protecting the world from PSTs and Bricked Backups!™ -Original Message- From: [EMAIL

Re: Queueing incoming mail

2001-12-08 Thread Mike V
As the DNS is under your control, why not simply setup an IIS server with SMTP service?. Once configured corrrectly, the incoming messages will be stored in the drop directory. Once the Exchange Server is operational simply place all of these files in the Exchange Server IMCDATA pickup

RE: Queueing incoming mail

2001-12-07 Thread Bob Razler
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 www.tzo.com, and firms like them, offer a store-and-forward service. I guess there is some service out there for you. Also, if they can do it with their DNS relaying, I am sure the guru's here or on a DNS list can figure out a way for you to do it

RE: Queueing incoming mail

2001-12-07 Thread Drewski
The first thing I'd suggest is talking to your ISP to see if they do mail caching. This is a good thing to have on all the time anyway, incase you lose your internet connection, or the exchange server crashes unexpectedly for some reason... -- Drew Visit

RE: Queueing incoming mail

2001-12-07 Thread Joe Pochedley
Adams once said. I especially like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by. -Original Message- From: Bob Razler [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Friday, December 07, 2001 4:09 PM To: Exchange Discussions Subject: RE: Queueing incoming mail -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE

RE: Queueing incoming mail

2001-12-07 Thread Anderson, Scott
Discussions Subject: RE: Queueing incoming mail Yes, we control our own DNS records... We actually have two incoming internet connections (for redundancy) with MS's ISA server between our LAN and the Internet on both connections... Both connections are just set up to forward port 25 to our Exchange box

Re: Queueing incoming mail

2001-12-07 Thread Daniel Chenault
Low-end server, put a freeware/shareware mailer package on it, give the Ex server a new IP, use the old IP for that one (unless you have a NAT solution), and let it collect the mail as it comes in. - Original Message - From: Joe Pochedley [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Exchange Discussions [EMAIL