On 2024/06/24 12:16, Marco Moock via mailop wrote:
> Am 24.06.2024 um 12:03:49 Uhr schrieb Alessandro Vesely via mailop:
>
> > IME, large sending times are often caused by IMAP. Most clients
> > operate by first sending the message and then saving it in the Sent
> > IMAP folder. Just changing th
On Mon 24/Jun/2024 12:16:32 +0200 Marco Moock via mailop wrote:
Am 24.06.2024 um 12:03:49 Uhr schrieb Alessandro Vesely via mailop:
IME, large sending times are often caused by IMAP. Most clients
operate by first sending the message and then saving it in the Sent
IMAP folder. Just changing th
Am 24.06.2024 um 12:03:49 Uhr schrieb Alessandro Vesely via mailop:
> IME, large sending times are often caused by IMAP. Most clients
> operate by first sending the message and then saving it in the Sent
> IMAP folder. Just changing that method to Bcc: halves the time
> required.
Why should usi
IME, large sending times are often caused by IMAP. Most clients operate by
first sending the message and then saving it in the Sent IMAP folder. Just
changing that method to Bcc: halves the time required.
Best
Ale
On Sat 22/Jun/2024 09:45:36 +0200 Jeff Pang wrote:
Hello
that's b/c the at
Hello
that's b/c the attachment can be sent as 100MB between users.
some users said they are hard sending large mail, so I am asking the
question.
Thanks.
Although, I am interested in how much the latency affects the
submission and how much that impacts your users.
--
Jeff Pang
jeffp...@a
Am 22.06.2024 um 15:45:36 Uhr schrieb Jeff Pang:
> that's b/c the attachment can be sent as 100MB between users.
> some users said they are hard sending large mail, so I am asking the
> question.
Is that a latency or bandwidth issue?
TCP is affected by high latency and will slow down.
To make y
Am Sat, 22 Jun 2024 07:01:00 +0800
schrieb Jeff Pang via mailop :
> do you know if there is a reverse proxy for submission?
> for instance, my server is in the US, while some customers are in EU,
> so I consider to deploy a reverse proxy in EU for speeding up their
> access.
Then you need a real
According to Viktor Dukhovni via mailop :
>In any case, modern MUAs deliver mail in the background, and TCP handles
>high delay networks just fine, so most users don't feel any impact from
>high RTTs to the submission service. It is your IMAP store and
>especially any webmail servers that you migh
On Sat, Jun 22, 2024 at 07:01:00AM +0800, Jeff Pang via mailop wrote:
> do you know if there is a reverse proxy for submission?
None should be necessary.
> For instance, my server is in the US, while some customers are in EU,
> so I consider to deploy a reverse proxy in EU for speeding up their
Hello list,
do you know if there is a reverse proxy for submission?
for instance, my server is in the US, while some customers are in EU, so
I consider to deploy a reverse proxy in EU for speeding up their access.
Thanks.
--
Jeff Pang
jeffp...@aol.com
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