> On Mon 19 July 2004, 19:56:38 +1000, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: >> Now that rings a bell! I have NAV so I guess for some reason I was >> guided to give POPFile 123. >> >> I've found the instructiosn that led me to 123: >> >> <quote> >> >> If you use an email scanning proxy that has changed your email setting >> like some versions of Norton Antivirus, then POPFile won't work straight >> off the bat: the email proxy will grab them instead. You need to configure >> POPFile to talk to the email scanner. (If your virus scanner didn't change >> your email POP3 server setting then there is no need to follow these instructions). >> >> (So, basically, emails get downloaded by the scanner, passed to POPFile, >> and then - finally - passed to your email program.) >> >> Now, since different brands of email scanners work differently, we'll >> work like this: >> >> 1. Disable the email scanner and return your settings to normal. >> 2. Tell POPFile to listen for connections on a different port. >> 3. Tell your email program to connect to POPFile on a different port. >> 4. Re-enable your email scanner with the new settings.
> Well, how about doing this again - try it without NAV and with Popfile > and TB! talking on port 110 (note that this changes your userid and/or > password, so note the old values before setting new ones). If that works > fine, then change the TB!/Popfile port, reset the userid and password and > re-enable NAV and see if that works. You mean it changes the proxying part of the userid? How does it change the password? Or do you mean the userid and password of something other than the POP3 email accounts themselves? -- Marten Gallagher Annery Kiln Web Design www.annerykiln.co.uk Using The Bat! 2.11.02 with POPFile 0.21.1 on Windows XP 5.1 ________________________________________________ Current version is 2.12.00 | 'Using TBUDL' information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html

