Robert Vassar wrote:
In Apple Mail use View - Message - Long Headers.
Thanks for the heads up. Here is the result for Robert's message:
Received: (qmail 816 invoked from network); 22 Feb 2008 22:43:10 -
Received: from 24.123.66.139 (HELO febo.com) (24.123.66.139)
by mrelay3-1.free.fr
Sylvain RICHARD said the following on 02/23/2008 08:59 AM:
In my case, most of the delay comes from my ISP (free.fr). Neville, just
do the same on your machine.
Please note that the usual caveat (is your server time set correctly?)
does not apply our case.
There is also some queuing delay
On Feb 23, 2008, at 8:31 AM, John Ackermann N8UR wrote:
Sylvain RICHARD said the following on 02/23/2008 08:59 AM:
Please note that the usual caveat (is your server time set
correctly?)
does not apply our case.
Just to tie off my end, the originating machine for that message runs
Quoth Robert Vassar at 2008-02-24 02:31...
... However, the first timestamp on the SMTP
envelope is generated by linode.rob-vassar.com, which is a virtual
server. It is a UML Linux instance that in effect runs as a large
program on a huge shared Linux server in a co-lo facility. It
In Apple Mail use View - Message - Long Headers.
FWIW Here's the relevant section on Sylvain's reply:
Received: from febo.com (meow.febo.com [24.123.66.139]) (using TLSv1
with cipher AES256-SHA (256/256 bits)) (No client certificate
requested) by mailhost.rob-vassar.com (Postfix)
Neville Michie said the following on 02/15/2008 05:14 PM:
Sorry for the double mailing,
I find it very disconcerting to not have my contributions sent back
to me.
I mail a response, but it seems not to have been sent, or there is a
big delay.
When I go to the archives I find it was sent