[quote user="vmgracia"]yes, it's true but many users need/want to use a local mail client instead to webmail and there is the need to find this kind of utility. [/quote]
There is Mr Postman that allows the users to get their mail via POP3 from a web mailer. MrPostman is a java program that allows you to access Yahoo Mail, Hotmail and other webmail services directly from your favorite mail client. It converts the web pages of your favorite webmail provider to e-mails and provides the standard POP interface to your mail client (e.g. Outlook Express, Netscape or Mozilla Mail, Thunderbird, Pegasus Mail). MrPostman is Free Software, released under the terms of the GNU Public License.
Currently supported webmail providers:
- Hotmail
- mail.com
- Yahoo
- gmail (Google mail)
- indiatimes.com
- juno
- rediffmail
- Gossamer mail
- Outlook Web Access (Exchange 5.5)
- Outlook Web Access 2003
- Caramail, Lycos.fr
- SquirrelMail
http://sourceforge.net/projects/mrpostman/
It does support SquirrelMail so you do not have to open up more than port 80 to the outside world.
If you do not want to do it this way then you are going to try to get directly to ports 110 via port 80 and so you will have to be running some web application on your web server to perform this task. I would worry a whole lot more that web application than opening port 110 on your router and passing them directly to Mercury/32.
<p>[quote user="vmgracia"]yes, it's true but many users need/want to use a local mail client instead to webmail and there is the need to find this kind of utility. [/quote]</p><p>There is Mr Postman that allows the users to get their mail via POP3 from a web mailer.&nbsp; MrPostman is a java program that allows you to access Yahoo Mail, Hotmail and other webmail services directly from your favorite mail client.&nbsp; It converts the web pages of your favorite webmail provider to e-mails and provides the standard POP interface to your mail client (e.g. Outlook Express, Netscape or Mozilla Mail, Thunderbird, Pegasus Mail).&nbsp; MrPostman is Free Software, released under the terms of the GNU Public License.
<font color="#000000" size="2" face="Arial,Helvetica"><p>Currently supported webmail providers:</p>
<ul><li>Hotmail</li><li>mail.com</li><li>Yahoo</li><li>gmail (Google mail)</li><li>indiatimes.com</li><li>juno</li><li>rediffmail</li><li>Gossamer mail</li><li>Outlook Web Access (Exchange 5.5)</li><li>Outlook Web Access 2003</li><li>Caramail, Lycos.fr</li><li>SquirrelMail</li></ul></font>
http://sourceforge.net/projects/mrpostman/ </p><p>It does support SquirrelMail so you do not have to open up more than port 80 to the outside world.&nbsp; </p><p>If you do not want to do it this way then you are going to try to get directly to ports 110 via port 80 and so you will have to be running some web application on your web server to perform this task. I would worry a whole lot more that web application than opening port 110 on your router and passing them directly to Mercury/32.</p><p>&nbsp;</p>