You all may want to try roundcube app on android. Just search roundcube in Google Play.
On Wed, Oct 23, 2013 at 5:08 AM, Kaz Kylheku <[email protected]> wrote: > ** > > RoundCube is a web client to e-mail. It is similar to Mozilla Thunderbird > or Microsoft Outlook, except that it runs in your web browser (and parts of > it run on the web server which serves it to your web browsers). > > The only port numbers used to talk to a RoundCube installation are usually > are 80 (HTTP) and 443 (HTTPS), like any web page/application, and these > numbers are implicit from the URL that is used. > > One of the points of using a web client is that you don't need to know > anything about ports for IMAP, SMTP et cetera. You log in to the web > interface and there is a web rendering of your inbox and folders, and a way > to send mail. > > It's like HotMail or Gmail, except it's run by your company! You don't > have to configure any port numbers to use Gmail. > > The server-side of the RoundCube installation itself knows port numbers. > It knows what IMAP server to talk to, and how to send mail over SMTP, plus > various other things. These parameters configured by the RoundCube > administrator for all of the users of the RoundCube installation. > > If your RoundCube installation is outward facing (externally accessible > over the Internet), you should be able to use it with your phone's web > browser, using a mobile data connection (requiring a mobile data plan from > your carrier), or a Wi-Fi connection. If your RoundCube installation is > visible only from your company's intranet, you may be able to get in by > setting up the VPN on your phone, so that your phone can securely join your > internal network and access internal web pages. Your sysadmin can help with > that, if it is possible. > > For instance, I can get into my personal RoundCube server from my > smartphone just by opening a browser and navigating to the page, which is > exposed to the Internet, exactly the way someone access their Gmail > account. > > But, usually I do not. Why? Because on my smartphone it is more > efficient to instead run a mail client, in my case the K-9 Mail free > application for Android. This connects to my IMAP and SMTP server, > bypassing Roundcube. You may be able to set up a mobile e-mail client to > access your corporate e-mail server, as an alternative to the RoundCube > interface, with the help of your mail administrator. *Note that since > Roundcube is not involved in such a setup, it is off topic in the Roundcube > user mailing list.* > > On 22.10.2013 11:58, Mary Ann Skweres wrote: > > I want to add my business email which uses Roundcube webmail software to > my T-mobile phone, but I need the Port number. Can anyone help me? > > Mary Ann > > > _______________________________________________ > Roundcube Users mailing > [email protected]http://lists.roundcube.net/mailman/listinfo/users > > > > -- > Tankan: Memorize Japanese Kanji: http://kylheku.com/tankan > > > _______________________________________________ > Roundcube Users mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.roundcube.net/mailman/listinfo/users >
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