|
> How is this different from > CHGSMTPA MAILROUTER('outgoing.verizon.net') FIREWALL(*YES) > Looks to me option 1 will get to outgoing.verizon.net and then > outgoing.verizon.net will reject it as being relayed mail. Maybe I don't understand the problem at all... For some reason I have a really hard time understanding humans. Computers are easy, people are very hard to understand. My understanding was that the iSeries worked for the specific cell phones that he was trying to send the mail to when it was relaying through outgoing.verizon.net -- but that this breaks everything else. And that's what this suggestion was based on. If the cell phones don't work when sending to outgoing.verizon.net, then you're right, this won't do anything different. > And what is his program going to tell outgoing.verizon.net that the > AS400 SMTP is not telling it. Even if you meant go to cwemail.com mail > server I do not see what his program could tell their mail server so it > does not think it is spam. Okay. Why does the outlook mail client work, but the iSeries not? I thought that the reason was that the outlook mail client was going to outgoing.verizon.net .. and that the iSeries couldn't do that because it broke other mail aside from the cell phone mail? Writing a program would allow you to bypass the iSeries mail server. But, if nothing works going through outgoing.verizon.net, then it won't solve the problem. My suggestions are based on the idea that the outlook client works because it's sending directly to outgoing.verizon.net -- and that the only reason he's not setting up his iSeries this way is because it breaks something else. At any rate, if the outlook client is working, you should be able to write an iSeries program that does the exact same thing. Maybe I'm just not understanding the situation. That's certainly possible -- the information, which has been sketchy at best, has been split across 10+ messages and even across threads. I get upwards of 300 e-mails a day, and I so may just be confused. > I think he would be better off checking what kind of authentication > verizion will accept. POP before SMTP or clear text would be my only > hope (I am not that good at encryption) and then write a program to > handle it. I didn't even know that POP before SMTP was an option?! The problem with POP before SMTP is that you need the ISP to support it, it's not something that you can do entirely on your side. If the ISP supports it and it solves the problem, then great, do that.
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
This mailing list archive is Copyright 1997-2024 by midrange.com and David Gibbs as a compilation work. Use of the archive is restricted to research of a business or technical nature. Any other uses are prohibited. Full details are available on our policy page. If you have questions about this, please contact [javascript protected email address].
Operating expenses for this site are earned using the Amazon Associate program and Google Adsense.