[email protected] wrote:

There are *3 separate Outgoing E-mail servers* involved here.

My ISP is relevant to only 1 of them.

The other two E-mail servers are GoDaddy and a third company.

I cannot conceive of any way that my ISP's settings are relevant
to Outgoing E-mail on the other 2 E-mail providers (even more so
when I am not home).

I can connect and have Web access and Incoming mail (using the Wifi
ISP - not my ISP), so my ISP authentication cannot apply, since I am
already into all three E-mail servers (for Incoming) and my ISP is
not in any way -- at that point -- involved with 2 of the 3.

I get that the E-mail associated with my ISP may require something
special to persuade my ISP to let me Send an E-mail from a non-home
Wifi but that does not explain why the other 2 are giving me the
exact same problem.

It *has* to be a setting in Seamonkey that is common to the 3.

I don't see how this can be related to my ISP because my ISP only
controls 1 of 3 of the Outgoing E-mail accounts.

This still sounds like the problem I described earlier in this thread.

If your home ISP is indifferent as to which SMTP server you use, all will work. If your road ISP requires you to use their SMTP server, then any mail sent to any SMTP server other than theirs will be blocked.

Has nothing to do with SeaMonkey. Two workarounds:

1) When connecting on the road, use the corresponding webmails for the various accounts, remembering to cc: or bcc: yourself so you'll have a local copy of everything you send; or

2) Set up a fourth SMTP server in SeaMonkey, which you don't use at home. When you're on the road, change your settings so all outgoing mail from all three accounts goes through that server. The server has to be that of the ISP through which you're connecting, and you have to have an account with that ISP and give name/password the first time you send this way (tell SM to remember these). When you return home, point your various accounts back to the various SMTP servers you would normally use.

In my case, I don't have an account with that ISP, but my nephew kindly allowed me to use his name/password to send mail. Of course, I would never use the info to read his mail, but I could if I were unscrupulous, so few people would let you do this.

--
War doesn't determine who's right, just who's left.
--
Paul B. Gallagher
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