Re: Forwarding Madness

From: Astra (info_at_NoEmail.com)
Date: 04/22/04


Date: Thu, 22 Apr 2004 10:14:33 +0100

Hi Guys

Understood re the multi-post.

Just to add a bit extra, this did seem to work fine before we upgraded the
server to Win2003 (was Win2000 before) and my client to Outlook 2003 (waas
2002 - is this called XP?). Problem was that our engineer also had to
basically re-install Exchange because it fell over big-stylely at the same
time. It maybe that he set something this time that is different from
before. Is there a setting that would do this?

Why does it say permission denied?

We have wanted to make it so that Exchange sends and receives our mail data
for the network, but because we have multiple external POP3 boxes that we
need to retrieve from and because we have a combo of Outlook for PC (2002 &
2003) and Outllook for Mac (2001) on the same network we've had problems
getting this all to work in a streamlined fashion.

In fact at present all our external email on the Macs (due to no POP
facility) is sent to an Outlook PC client and then forwarded on from this
machine to the outside world.

Regards

Robbie

"Lanwench [MVP - Exchange]"
<lanwench@heybuddy.donotsendme.unsolicitedmail.atyahoo.com> wrote in message
news:%23ZjDzhAKEHA.4072@TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl...
Brandy Van Dao [MSFT] wrote:
> The best way to solve this would be to use your Exchange server for
> internet mail as well as internal mail.
>
> But to address your imediate question... it sounds like you have two
> transport providers in one profile. This configuration may create
> unexpected results and is not supported by Microsoft.

...only in OL2000 and prior - it's supported in later versions and works
pretty well. However, I do agree that getting rid of the POP entirely and
hosting the domain's mail on the Exchange server directly is a much better
idea.
>
>
> "Astra" <info@NoEmail.com> wrote in message
> news:ellyQA8JEHA.2680@TK2MSFTNGP11.phx.gbl...
>> Hi All
>>
>> I apologise for the cross-post, but I honestly don't know which NG
>> this should be in.
>>
>> I also can't explain this problem any other way, so I hope this list
>> makes some sense:
>>
>> 1) I'm using Outlook 2003 (from the MS Office 2003 CDs) on WinXP SP1
>> (all of the web updates as of today), which connects to the outside
>> world via Broadband to get it's Internet email and connects to the
>> local network via Exchange 2003 (I think because it is running on a
>> Win2003 Server) to get local mail from other people. We all get our
>> Internet email directly from the Internet rather than routing
>> through Exchange. A boggle in itself!!
>>
>> 2) I receive an Internet email from my external POP3 account.
>>
>> 3) I read it.
>>
>> 4) I send a reply back to the sender. No problem.
>>
>> 5) I need to forward it to somebody on my internal network so I:
>> * re-send again
>> * put an Exchange client into the To field
>> * change the Account (basically the from pop-up menu) from my
>> default setting to Exchange
>> * and then send it
>>
>> 6) After a few seconds, I get an error message saying 'you do not
>> have permission to send to this recipient''.
>>
>> 7) If I create a completely new message and copy and paste the text
>> from this original email into my new message and send it then it
>> works fine. But this is crap.
>>
>> Any ideas how I resolve this?
>>
>> Rgds
>>
>> Robbie



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