On Thu, May 16, 2002 at 02:06:15PM -0400, Hall Stevenson wrote: > Find an OE user who can access their e-mail via some sort of > "webmail". Send them a message. Have them check to see if they > get the message via "webmail". If it's not there, this isn't > an OE problem (nor Debian) and possibly not a mutt problem. If > it is there, then have them get their e-mail with OE and see > if it mysteriously has disappeared.
Or even better, with some social engineering, find their POP box username and password, telnet into it, and check that the email has arrived. Check that it's retriveable. If Outlook still refuses to believe that the message exists then find the LART...[1] telnet session would as follows: telnet mail.blah.blah 110 > [welcome message] < USER username > [OK] < PASS password > [OK or ERR Bad Pass] < STAT > [number of messages, size in octets of all messages] hopefully there's only 1: yours! < RETR 1 text of your email will be shown a '.' terminates the email < QUIT where > is text sent from server and < is text sent to server. [1] LART: Luser Attitude Re-adjustment Tool $> dict LART for more info Matthew -- Matthew Sackman Nottingham England BOFH Excuse Board: Root name servers corrupted. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]