Yesterday I switched from RCN internet provider to Verizon Fios. Now
can not receive mail . I have inputted all the new data but keep
getting a message #15 stating that"Peer connect failure. (the host
refuses the connection). Verizon techs have spent 11/2 hours without
being able to trouble shoot since they don't support ( nor have they
ever heard of) Pegasus mail. Verizon needs some kind of authentication
but I don't know where to find this on the Pegasus network
configuration. Can anyone help? I am desperate!
It does not matter what mail clients they do or do not support. They should have been very specific about the server, ports and types of authentication required. PMail can do both SSL and STARTTLS types of authentication but these are handled in different ways. Checkout the options in Tools | Internet Options for both POP3 and SMTP by editing the setup and selecting the "Security" tab. Again, ask the people at Verizon exactly what they require.
FWIW, when I tried telnetting into incoming.verizon.net to port 110 it looked like a normal non-ssl server. Since I did not have a Verizon account of course it rejected my connection.
<blockquote>Yesterday I switched from RCN internet provider to Verizon Fios. Now
can not receive mail . I have inputted all the new data but keep
getting a message #15 stating that"Peer connect failure. (the host
refuses the connection). Verizon techs have spent 11/2 hours without
being able to trouble shoot since they don't support ( nor have they
ever heard of) Pegasus mail. Verizon needs some kind of authentication
but I don't know where to find this on the Pegasus network
configuration. Can anyone help? I am desperate!</blockquote><p>It does not matter what mail clients they do or do not support.&nbsp; They should have been very specific about the server, ports and types of authentication required.&nbsp; PMail can do both SSL and STARTTLS types of authentication but these are handled in different ways.&nbsp; Checkout the options in Tools | Internet Options for both POP3 and SMTP by editing the setup and selecting the "Security" tab.&nbsp; Again, ask the people at Verizon exactly what they require.</p><p>FWIW, when I tried telnetting into <span id="SolutionDesc1"><span id="SolutionDesc1_PresentationModeControlsContainer_Label_PresentationSolutionDesc1">incoming.verizon.net to port 110 it looked like a normal non-ssl server.&nbsp; Since I did not have a Verizon account of course it rejected my connection.</span></span> </p><p><b>&nbsp;</b></p><p>&nbsp;</p>