On Tue, Sep 17, 2002 at 03:18:23PM +0200, René Clerc wrote:
> What about installing a simple SMTP daemon on your machine, which will
> relay your emails to your office's mailserver, once you're back online?
As it turns out exim was already configured to do this. I just hadn't
given it a chance t
* On 2002.09.17, in <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
* "Alex Polite" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I regularly deal with mail when I'm away from my DSL pipe. Right now
> I'm at the coffee shop and the postponed messages are piling up. When
> I get back to the office I'd like to be able to
> send-all-pos
* Alex Polite <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2002-09-17 12:20]:
> I regularly deal with mail when I'm away from my DSL pipe. Right now
> I'm at the coffee shop and the postponed messages are piling up. When
> I get back to the office I'd like to be able to
> send-all-postponed-messages.
the trick is to se
* Alex Polite <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [17-09-2002 14:20]:
> I regularly deal with mail when I'm away from my DSL pipe. Right now
> I'm at the coffee shop and the postponed messages are piling up. When
> I get back to the office I'd like to be able to
> send-all-postponed-messages.
You want the func
I regularly deal with mail when I'm away from my DSL pipe. Right now
I'm at the coffee shop and the postponed messages are piling up. When
I get back to the office I'd like to be able to
send-all-postponed-messages.
--
Alex Polite
http://plusseven.com/gpg/
I regularly deal with mail when I'm away from my DSL pipe. Right now
I'm at the coffee shop and the postponed messages are piling up. When
I get back to the office I'd like to be able to
send-all-postponed-messages.
--
Alex Polite
http://plusseven.com/gpg/