[quote user="mer99"] I have a situation where I have some "shared" pop3 mail boxes. A number of people will check the same mailbox (info@somedomain.com). Each person has their e-mail client set to remove the e-mail from the server after it downloads the message.[/quote]
One way of dealing with inbound common mail, to f.ex. info@dom.com or support@dom.com is to install a common client such as a web mail client that is used by mulitple users.
Another way is to say that info@dom.com / support@dom.com is a mailing list that sends the mail to multiple users, and the users are instructed to respond both to the list and the sender so everyone has the same results.
<P>[quote user="mer99"] I have a situation where I have some "shared" pop3 mail boxes.&nbsp; A number of people will check the same mailbox (info@somedomain.com).&nbsp; Each person has their e-mail client set to remove the e-mail from the server after it downloads the message.[/quote]</P>
<P>One way of dealing with inbound common mail, to f.ex. <A href="mailto:info@dom.com">info@dom.com</A> or <A href="mailto:support@dom.com">support@dom.com</A> is to install a common client such as a web mail&nbsp;client that is used by mulitple users.</P>
<P>Another way is to say that <A href="mailto:info@dom.com">info@dom.com</A> / <A href="mailto:support@dom.com">support@dom.com</A> is a mailing list that sends the mail to multiple users, and the users are instructed to respond both to the list and the sender so everyone has the same results.</P>