Re: Exchange PLUS POP3
- From: Rich S <RichS@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 24 Oct 2006 16:26:03 -0700
I understand what the SBS Internet Users rule is supposed to do. The user is
configuring the POP3 Locally. When I hit send/receive and look at the ISA
reporting, it shows blocked by the SBS Internet Users rule.
"SBS 2003 User" wrote:
That cannot be so because the SBS Internet Users rule is to allow.
unrestricted internet access from internal to external. How did you come to
this conclusion? And I am assuming the boss is trying to set this up in
outlook internally?
"Rich S" <RichS@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:4EE33027-03DE-48CA-B53E-A9900C87DEBF@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Configuring the POP3 accoount in the users Outlook is what I want to do in
thiscase, but ISA 2004 is blocking it for some reason with the SBS
Internet
Users rule.
"SBS 2003 User" wrote:
We originally were a POP3 users with our own Exchange Server setup on our
SBS 2003 box. I have since switched over and we are now hosting our own
SMTP
Exchange Server. All email is delivered directly to us now. However we
still
use our mail providor as a backup so we still maintain POP3 mailboxes on
their mail servers so if our Exchange server goes down we can log onto
their
webmail page and receive email.
We have this email where if a client also uses the same ISP mail servers
then their email never leaves their mail servers thus it never gets
delivered to our Exchange server. We need to login to the POP3 mailboxes
to
retrieve them We you can pretty much tell that this was not acceptable to
the boss. So I configured our Exchange server to also go out and pull
down
POP3 mail from the ISP mail servers to our SMTP Exchange server. The
default
and fastest setting is every 15 minutes. So you have two options here.
you
can do what I do above or you can create another user account in the
bosses
Outlook pointing to the ISP POP and SMTP servers and all he has to do is
hit
the Send/Receive button to download the POP3 mail. It does not do it
automatically when you open Outlook. The drawback to using and ownloading
POP3 directly to Outlook is you cannot filter SPAM or Viruses on the POP3
connector like you can on the SMTP connector. You would have to purchase
a
3rd party software to filter the POP3 connector. hope this helos you.
"Rich S" <RichS@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:D86ABC4B-023E-4942-9FFC-93DADCC543FB@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Running SBS 2003R2. Users email is routed via SMTP. Owner has
seperate
POP3
email address he wants to see in Outlook and send from Outlook with
both
email addresses maintaining their individuality. Thus far, ISA2004 is
blocking POP3 on the SBS Internet User Policy, I'm not sure why. The
policy
looks like it's all allowed. At this point, I only have the POP3
configured
on the users Outlook. What might I be missing?
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Exchange PLUS POP3
- From: Cris Hanna[SBS-MVP]
- Re: Exchange PLUS POP3
- References:
- Re: Exchange PLUS POP3
- From: SBS 2003 User
- Re: Exchange PLUS POP3
- From: SBS 2003 User
- Re: Exchange PLUS POP3
- Prev by Date: Re: IE7 OWA 2003 SSL
- Next by Date: Re: General Email Box
- Previous by thread: Re: Exchange PLUS POP3
- Next by thread: Re: Exchange PLUS POP3
- Index(es):