[quote user="PaulW"]
"... details... connection... server... changes ..."
[/quote]
Ahhh, I was afraid I would clutter up the forum with obfuscating details. Sorry for being too vauge. Clueless Newbee strikes again
Here's a 90 word description.
(PREVIOUSLY WORKING SYSTEM)
- Me here, Pegasus v.4.41
- Connection provided by: www.LocalNet.com
- Connection: Dial-up (speed about 25K)
- Receiving mail server in-house at LocalNet
- SMTP server in-house at LocalNet
(FIRST FAILING ATTEMPT)
- Connection provided by: Charter Communications
- Connection: I think this is cable (speed about 4.5 Meg)
- Receiving mail server in-house at Charter
- SMTP server in-house at Charter
(SECOND FAILING ATTEMPT)
- Connection provided by: Charter Communications
- Connection: Same 4.5 Meg Cable Modem
- Receiving mail server in-house at GoDaddy
- SMTP server in-house at GoDaddy
(END OF DESCRIPTION)
My tech support conversations (more than 5 hours with 7 different calls) have yielded these results
LocalNet made it polite and plain and firm: I can do what I want with their machine as long as I dial-in over the telephone. Can you blame them ? That's their business and that's what they sold me; and I might add, they do that job extremely well.
Charter and GoDaddy both gave me long phone conversations and investigations, with repeated subtle suggestions and hints that Pegasus was causing the problem (since it's one'o'them 3rd party E-mail clients, which are all bad). Both companies' reps dropped some not-too-specific (but clear, just the same) hints that OutLook express is the solution to all problems.
When I asked them if they could tell me what bytes I was sending, and the specific string~byte~command~format~whatever that was causing them to reject the request, I got the big uhm, no we don't have that capability here type of conversation. When I asked if there was another human further up the line who might be more experienced or knowledgeable in the matter, the answer was uniformly no.
That's my question: Who sends what byte(s) to whom, in what order, to cause what action to occur on what part of what system ?
I'm getting the distinct impression, from experiments and minor comments from these tech support people, that the entire problem is the "From:" field in the headers. That is exactly why I want to use Pegasus in the first place. It allows that. Evidently, both Charter and GoDaddy only allow SMTP access when your "From:" field matches the user-name (which is the E-mail address they assign you). Again, these are all guesses. No human on any phone from any company is capable of telling me what bytes went which way in response to what expectations between what systems.
So, I'm guessing further that this means that if you have a small company and you want your E-mail to display your own company's domain name in the "From:" address of your messages, you'll need to find another place. [[update: the following sentence is now false]] Charter and GoDaddy won't allow that.
[[correct version now is]] GoDaddy does allow this, thanks to PaulW and a guy at GoDaddy
[quote user="PaulW"]<P>"... details... connection... server... changes ..."</P><P>[/quote]</P><P>Ahhh, I was afraid I would clutter up the forum with obfuscating details. Sorry for being too vauge. Clueless Newbee strikes again</P><P>Here's a 90 word description.</P><P><STRONG>(PREVIOUSLY WORKING SYSTEM)</STRONG></P><UL><LI>Me here, Pegasus v.4.41 </LI><LI>Connection provided by: <EM><U>www.LocalNet.com</U></EM></LI><LI>Connection: Dial-up (speed about 25K)</LI><LI>Receiving mail server in-house at <EM><U>LocalNet</U></EM></LI><LI>SMTP server in-house at <EM><U>LocalNet</U></EM></LI></UL><P><STRONG></STRONG></P><P><STRONG>(FIRST FAILING ATTEMPT)</STRONG></P><UL><LI>Connection provided by: <U><EM>Charter Communications</EM></U></LI><LI>Connection: I think this is cable (speed about 4.5 Meg)</LI><LI>Receiving mail server in-house at <U><EM>Charter</EM></U></LI><LI>SMTP server in-house at <U><EM>Charter</EM></U></LI></UL><P><STRONG></STRONG></P><P><STRONG>(SECOND FAILING ATTEMPT)</STRONG></P><UL><LI>Connection provided by: <EM><U>Charter Communications</U></EM></LI><LI>Connection: Same 4.5 Meg Cable Modem</LI><LI>Receiving mail server in-house at <EM><U>GoDaddy</U></EM></LI><LI>SMTP server in-house at <EM><U>GoDaddy</U></EM></LI></UL><P><STRONG>(END OF DESCRIPTION)</STRONG></P><P>My tech support conversations (more than 5 hours with 7 different calls) have yielded these results</P><P><U>LocalNet</U><EM> </EM> made it polite and plain and firm: I can do what I want with their machine as long as I dial-in over the telephone. Can you blame them ? That's their business and that's what they sold me; and I might add, they do that job extremely well.</P><P><U>Charter</U> and <U>GoDaddy</U> both gave me long phone conversations and investigations, with repeated subtle suggestions and hints that Pegasus was causing the problem (since it's one'o'them 3rd party E-mail clients, which are all bad). Both companies' reps dropped some not-too-specific (but clear, just the same) hints that OutLook express is the solution to all problems.</P><P>When I asked them if they could tell me what bytes I was sending, and the specific string~byte~command~format~whatever that was causing them to reject the request, I got the big <EM>uhm, no we don't have that capability here </EM> type of conversation. When I asked if there was another human further up the line who might be more experienced or knowledgeable in the matter, the answer was uniformly no.</P><P>That's my question: Who sends what byte(s) to whom, in what order, to cause what action to occur on what part of what system ? </P><P>I'm getting the distinct impression, from experiments and minor comments from these tech support people, that the entire problem is the "From:" field in the headers. That is exactly why I want to use Pegasus in the first place. It allows that. Evidently, both Charter and GoDaddy only allow SMTP access when your "From:" field matches the user-name (which is the E-mail address they assign you). Again, these are all guesses. No human on any phone from any company is capable of telling me what bytes went which way in response to what expectations between what systems.</P><P>So, I'm guessing further that this means that if you have a small company and you want your E-mail to display your own company's domain name in the "From:" address of your messages, you'll need to find another place. [[<EM>update: the following sentence is now false</EM>]] Charter and GoDaddy won't allow that. </P><P>[[<EM>correct version now is</EM>]] GoDaddy does allow this, thanks to PaulW and a guy at GoDaddy</P>