| Other Added |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Internet and Businesses Online > Web Hosting > Understanding Email |
|
Other Added - Understanding Email
Persuasive Negotiation Tips To Get What You Want out. On average servers will store this verification for 30 minutes before requiring you to check your mail again. Some internet service providers (ISPs), such as Earthlink and SBC, may require you to use their corporate SMTP servers instead of the one set up with your domain, in order to help them control junk email being sent out through their network. You can find out what their SMTP server is by contacting the ISP's technical support or looking it up on their website.Negotiation skills are another form of persuasion, which, when used carefully will ensure you get what you want. What you need to be sure about, though, is what you do actually want; so you must have in mind a really clear idea of your intention before you engage in this persuasion exercise.When you think about who you want to persuade, what benefits will they gain from your persuasion?Your proposition will be received much more receptively if you have in mind what benefits they expect to gain.If you can step into their shoes and empathise with their situation, what benefits can you perceive from their viewpoint?When you have a good idea of what the other person wants and you keep that positive intention in your mind you will automatically create a rapport between you.Creating this rapport means that the other person relates to you as someone with the same values and qualities as they have. Now you are in a position to ask questions that they will not consider hostile or intrusive,they will open up allowing you to discover what is important to them.Now, to be successful with your persuasive negotiation, follow these negotiation tips. An important point to remember is talk less, listen more and focus on the person you are engaged with. In other words sit there and listen as they give you all the high quality information that you can then use to powerfully persuade and guide them!By paying attention you will notice that people use certain words which may have a lot of emotional value attached.You will also notice that that many people use words or phrases that indicate how they perceive the world around them.Listen for the obvious phrases like "I see it this way..." or "It looks to me..." both of which mean the person is what you could call visually oriented.Alternativ A key difference in how an email client works compared with a webbased interface is that the email client downloads the contents of the mailbox to your computer's hard drive and removes them from your mailbox on the server. This way, you can store as much old email as your hard drive can hold and you rarely have to worry about your disk space on the server getting full as long as you check your mail frequently. If you go a long time without checking your email or you receive several large attachments, then your mailbox on the server can still get full, but as soon as you check your mail with the mail client, the mailbox is emptied just like a regular postal mailbox and the cycle starts over. An email client usually also comes with a larger range of features, such as address books, mail filtering and folder storage options, read receipt notices and other things that a web-based program can't handle because it would bog the server down trying to handle all that for hundreds or thousands of accounts. The downside of using an email client is that you can only check the mail from wherever you have the clien The Benefits and Advantages of Ebooks Everybody knows what email is, right? In the modern business world, email has become one of our most important methods of communication, and indeed often a web hosting client considers the operation of his email more important than the website itself. Unfortunately however, most people have only a very superficial idea of how email really works, so when trouble does arise, they have no idea how to troubleshoot the problem and it takes longer to solve. Just by knowing the basics of how email works, you can give a more accurate problem description to tech support personnel and even solve some problems yourself! You might even find some new and useful features of your email that you didn't know about before. Let's get started.An ebook is a book in electronic format. It is downloaded to a computer, PC, Mac, laptop, PDA or any other kind of computer, and is read on the screen. It can have numbered pages, table of contents, pictures and graphics, exactly like a printed book.Ebooks present many benefits and advantages, and this article shows some of them.It is very simple and easy to purchase and download ebooks through the Internet. It is exactly like purchasing any other product. The only difference is that after payment you will either be directed to a download page or receive the download link in an email. All you have to do is click on the link and the ebook will automatically download to your computer, to a folder of your own choice.After download you don't have to be connected to the Internet in order to read the ebook. You can stay offline. If you wish to have it printed, it is very easy. Just click on the print button in the ebook, to print it with your home printer.So what are the benefits and advantages of ebooks?1. Ebooks are delivered almost instantaneously. You can purchase, download and start reading them within minutes, without leaving your chair. You don't have to go to a bookstore to buy them, neither wait for them for days, weeks and sometimes more to arrive in the mail.2. No trees are required to manufacture paper for the pages of ebooks.3. When you need certain information, you can get it immediately, by downloading an ebook.4. Many ebooks are sold nowadays with bonuses, which you usually do not get with a printed book. This adds value to your purchase.5. Ebooks take up less space. You practically don't need any space to store them. You don't need a library or a room for them. You can store hundreds and thousands of ebook in your computer.6. Ebooks are portable. You can carry a What exactly is an email address? The short answer is that an email address is a user account of a particular domain name that is hosted somewhere. That domain name can be your own or one that someone else allows you to have an account on, such as yahoo.com or gmail.com. Either way, the domain must be hosted, not simply registered. The web hosting server is what provides the software to send and receive mail and the disk space to store received messages in a mailbox file. All web hosting accounts come with the ability to create user email accounts. To create the email address myname@mydomain.com, you would log into your hosting control panel for mydomain.com and create a new user called "myname" in the user account management area and create a password for that user. Once this is done, an internet-accessible mailbox is created on the server which you can begin using to send and receive email by whatever connection methods your host allows. What happens when I check my email? Before we start this answer, there are two types of email accounts that you can use, POP and IMAP. POP (Post Office Protocol) is by far the most common and is what we will discuss first. IMAP will be described separately below. As we said above, every email address has a username and a password. Wherever you log in to check your email, whether it is a web-based interface like hotmail.com or an email client like Outlook Express, you have to provide your username and password to receive mail. The username tells the server which mailbox file to retrieve or display the mail from, and the password confirms your identity to prove to the server that you are authorized to receive the mail. The server has your password stored in a file from the time your account was created, and whenever you log in, it compares the password you provide with the password it has on file. If they match, then the server allows you to access the mail in your mailbox. All passwords are case-sensitive, so if your original password is "PassWord" and you try to log in with "password", it won't work. Usernames are not case-sensitive, however, so the server will recognize you whether you log in as "MyName" or "myname". What is the difference between web-based email and using an email client? The two primary ways to access an email account are from a web-based interface or by using an email client program, like Eudora, Thunderbird or Microsoft Outlook. Here's how they work: 1. Web-Based Mail: This type of access is done through your web browser. You would browse to a particular web page that has a login area connected to the web hosting server that houses your account. You put in your username and password and you are conveyed to a page that displays the contents of your mailbox on the server. From here you can read, reply to, forward or delete mail you have received, or generate and send new messages. All of this is done through a mail program running on the server such as Horde, Squirrelmail, or NeoMail, or a custom interface like those used by Yahoo!, GMail, etc. Some servers even offer you the option of logging in through different mail programs, depending on which one you like better. You can access web-based mail from anywhere in the world where you have internet access. Whenever you use a web-based interface to manage your mail, you are accessing the contents of your mailbox on the server directly. If the server allows you 20 megabytes of disk space for your mailbox, then that is the maximum amount of mail you can have in your box at any one time. If you fill up all of that space, then you will not be able to receive any more mail until you delete some messages or get your host to give you more storage space, so your ability to archive messages is limited. If you delete a message, then it is gone forever. Web-based mail is fairly slow because your computer is continuously making connections with the mail server, and most web-based mail programs have fairly limited features. 2. Email Clients: You are probably familiar with email programs such as Microsoft Outlook or Eudora. They are what is known as an email client. Email clients can only be accessed from the computer on which the program is installed, but instead of only being able to access one server like the web-based mail programs, an email client can be set up to check multiple email accounts hosted on different servers at the same time. All you need to check an email address from an email account are the following settings:
You already know about the username and password, and the two mail servers tell your email client where to find the web hosting server that your account resides on so that it can connect to the mail software on that computer and allow you to send and receive mail. Whenever you sign up for a web hosting account, the hosting provider will tell you what the names of these servers are, and they are usually related to your domain name. A typical POP3 server name would be mail.mydomain.com or pop3.mydomain.com. The SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) server is a separate part of the server's mail software which handles outgoing email. Its name might look like mail.mydomain.com or smtp.mydomain.com. Most servers require you to check your incoming mail first, and thus verify your identity with your password, before they will allow you to send mail out. On average servers will store this verification for 30 minutes before requiring you to check your mail again. Some internet service providers (ISPs), such as Earthlink and SBC, may require you to use their corporate SMTP servers instead of the one set up with your domain, in order to help them control junk email being sent out through their network. You can find out what their SMTP server is by contacting the ISP's technical support or looking it up on their website. A key difference in how an email client works compared with a webbased interface is that the email client downloads the contents of the mailbox to your computer's hard drive and removes them from your mailbox on the server. This way, you can store as much old email as your hard drive can hold and you rarely have to worry about your disk space on the server getting full as long as you check your mail frequently. If you go a long time without checking your email or you receive several large attachments, then your mailbox on the server can still get full, but as soon as you check your mail with the mail client, the mailbox is emptied just like a regular postal mailbox and the cycle starts over. An email client usually also comes with a larger range of features, such as address books, mail filtering and folder storage options, read receipt notices and other things that a web-based program can't handle because it would bog the server down trying to handle all that for hundreds or thousands of accounts. The downside of using an email client is that you can only check the mail from wherever you have the client Ecommerce Hosting Essentials s created on the server which you can begin using to send and receive email by whatever connection methods your host allows.Finding a professionally run ecommerce hosting company is one of the most essential steps you need to take in setting up your ecommerce web site.Without an ecommerce hosting provider that can guarantee your site will be displayed virtually 100% of the time your business will always be at a disadvantage.More ecommerce hosting essentials: 24/7 support with a fast response time, ideally using an instant messaging service such as that provided by Hostgator. This is a very effective way of resolving issues with your site, particularly when you are going through the initial set up phase.Regular data backups. You need to be reassured that if the worst does happen that your ecommerce hosting service will be able to restore your web site in a short period of time.Look for flexibility in their services particularly the upgrade path. This ensures that as your web site grows you do not have to look for alternative ecommerce hosting or pay an exhorbitant amount to change your package.Secure server facilities to take confidential information with and to reassure your customers. Any ecommerce hosting service worth its salt should be able to provide this, stay away from those that do not.Support for the add on scripts and server side programming you or your web site developer will require. Most ecommerce hosting services offer more than enough support but it is as well to check before committing yourself.A comprehensive web sites statistics package. The better hosts will have a range of reporting packages from which you can choose your favorite. If the host offers the cpanel control panel then you should have a good range to choose from.Fully featured accessories package that enables you to automate tasks such as your shopping cart What happens when I check my email? Before we start this answer, there are two types of email accounts that you can use, POP and IMAP. POP (Post Office Protocol) is by far the most common and is what we will discuss first. IMAP will be described separately below. As we said above, every email address has a username and a password. Wherever you log in to check your email, whether it is a web-based interface like hotmail.com or an email client like Outlook Express, you have to provide your username and password to receive mail. The username tells the server which mailbox file to retrieve or display the mail from, and the password confirms your identity to prove to the server that you are authorized to receive the mail. The server has your password stored in a file from the time your account was created, and whenever you log in, it compares the password you provide with the password it has on file. If they match, then the server allows you to access the mail in your mailbox. All passwords are case-sensitive, so if your original password is "PassWord" and you try to log in with "password", it won't work. Usernames are not case-sensitive, however, so the server will recognize you whether you log in as "MyName" or "myname". What is the difference between web-based email and using an email client? The two primary ways to access an email account are from a web-based interface or by using an email client program, like Eudora, Thunderbird or Microsoft Outlook. Here's how they work: 1. Web-Based Mail: This type of access is done through your web browser. You would browse to a particular web page that has a login area connected to the web hosting server that houses your account. You put in your username and password and you are conveyed to a page that displays the contents of your mailbox on the server. From here you can read, reply to, forward or delete mail you have received, or generate and send new messages. All of this is done through a mail program running on the server such as Horde, Squirrelmail, or NeoMail, or a custom interface like those used by Yahoo!, GMail, etc. Some servers even offer you the option of logging in through different mail programs, depending on which one you like better. You can access web-based mail from anywhere in the world where you have internet access. Whenever you use a web-based interface to manage your mail, you are accessing the contents of your mailbox on the server directly. If the server allows you 20 megabytes of disk space for your mailbox, then that is the maximum amount of mail you can have in your box at any one time. If you fill up all of that space, then you will not be able to receive any more mail until you delete some messages or get your host to give you more storage space, so your ability to archive messages is limited. If you delete a message, then it is gone forever. Web-based mail is fairly slow because your computer is continuously making connections with the mail server, and most web-based mail programs have fairly limited features. 2. Email Clients: You are probably familiar with email programs such as Microsoft Outlook or Eudora. They are what is known as an email client. Email clients can only be accessed from the computer on which the program is installed, but instead of only being able to access one server like the web-based mail programs, an email client can be set up to check multiple email accounts hosted on different servers at the same time. All you need to check an email address from an email account are the following settings:
You already know about the username and password, and the two mail servers tell your email client where to find the web hosting server that your account resides on so that it can connect to the mail software on that computer and allow you to send and receive mail. Whenever you sign up for a web hosting account, the hosting provider will tell you what the names of these servers are, and they are usually related to your domain name. A typical POP3 server name would be mail.mydomain.com or pop3.mydomain.com. The SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) server is a separate part of the server's mail software which handles outgoing email. Its name might look like mail.mydomain.com or smtp.mydomain.com. Most servers require you to check your incoming mail first, and thus verify your identity with your password, before they will allow you to send mail out. On average servers will store this verification for 30 minutes before requiring you to check your mail again. Some internet service providers (ISPs), such as Earthlink and SBC, may require you to use their corporate SMTP servers instead of the one set up with your domain, in order to help them control junk email being sent out through their network. You can find out what their SMTP server is by contacting the ISP's technical support or looking it up on their website. A key difference in how an email client works compared with a webbased interface is that the email client downloads the contents of the mailbox to your computer's hard drive and removes them from your mailbox on the server. This way, you can store as much old email as your hard drive can hold and you rarely have to worry about your disk space on the server getting full as long as you check your mail frequently. If you go a long time without checking your email or you receive several large attachments, then your mailbox on the server can still get full, but as soon as you check your mail with the mail client, the mailbox is emptied just like a regular postal mailbox and the cycle starts over. An email client usually also comes with a larger range of features, such as address books, mail filtering and folder storage options, read receipt notices and other things that a web-based program can't handle because it would bog the server down trying to handle all that for hundreds or thousands of accounts. The downside of using an email client is that you can only check the mail from wherever you have the clien Clothes Can Make a Difference in Your Career Advancement! mail client program, like Eudora, Thunderbird or Microsoft Outlook. Here's how they work:Men and women have to pay attention to how they dress on the job. If you don’t, your job may be at risk.According to the San Antonio Express News the sexier a woman dresses and the more prominent a position she holds, the more negatively she’s perceived.For men, it’s slightly different. “What make men attractive to women--being industrious, ambitious, having a good job and a high status, being a powerful leader--are also the same traits that make them successful at work”These conclusions were presented by researcher, Peter Glick, in Psychology of Women Quarterly.For example, Glick found that sexy attire didn’t hurt the receptionist’s image. But the same clothes worn by a woman in management made her seem less competent and less intelligent.Men can also dress too sexy for work. A shirt with too many open buttons showing cleavage might work great in a bar but not on the job.Offenses like that, committed by men and women, often go unpunished. But sometimes a little cleavage can mean losing a job. Executive coach Barbara Greene says, “Whatever you’re wearing, you’re representing not only yourself but also the company.”Glick concludes that maintaining a professional appearance becomes even more important as workers climb the corporate ladder. Likewise Greene advises, “When you dress inappropriately, your authority is questioned and your credibility is questioned.”She concludes, “The closer to the chief executive you are, the more conservatively you should dress.”The same rules would apply to anyone preparing for a face-to-face interview or job search meeting. Your next employer has the expectation that you will present yourself consistent with the dress code of the organization you’re interested in.So, we recommend you take the time to find out what those expectations ar 1. Web-Based Mail: This type of access is done through your web browser. You would browse to a particular web page that has a login area connected to the web hosting server that houses your account. You put in your username and password and you are conveyed to a page that displays the contents of your mailbox on the server. From here you can read, reply to, forward or delete mail you have received, or generate and send new messages. All of this is done through a mail program running on the server such as Horde, Squirrelmail, or NeoMail, or a custom interface like those used by Yahoo!, GMail, etc. Some servers even offer you the option of logging in through different mail programs, depending on which one you like better. You can access web-based mail from anywhere in the world where you have internet access. Whenever you use a web-based interface to manage your mail, you are accessing the contents of your mailbox on the server directly. If the server allows you 20 megabytes of disk space for your mailbox, then that is the maximum amount of mail you can have in your box at any one time. If you fill up all of that space, then you will not be able to receive any more mail until you delete some messages or get your host to give you more storage space, so your ability to archive messages is limited. If you delete a message, then it is gone forever. Web-based mail is fairly slow because your computer is continuously making connections with the mail server, and most web-based mail programs have fairly limited features. 2. Email Clients: You are probably familiar with email programs such as Microsoft Outlook or Eudora. They are what is known as an email client. Email clients can only be accessed from the computer on which the program is installed, but instead of only being able to access one server like the web-based mail programs, an email client can be set up to check multiple email accounts hosted on different servers at the same time. All you need to check an email address from an email account are the following settings:
You already know about the username and password, and the two mail servers tell your email client where to find the web hosting server that your account resides on so that it can connect to the mail software on that computer and allow you to send and receive mail. Whenever you sign up for a web hosting account, the hosting provider will tell you what the names of these servers are, and they are usually related to your domain name. A typical POP3 server name would be mail.mydomain.com or pop3.mydomain.com. The SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) server is a separate part of the server's mail software which handles outgoing email. Its name might look like mail.mydomain.com or smtp.mydomain.com. Most servers require you to check your incoming mail first, and thus verify your identity with your password, before they will allow you to send mail out. On average servers will store this verification for 30 minutes before requiring you to check your mail again. Some internet service providers (ISPs), such as Earthlink and SBC, may require you to use their corporate SMTP servers instead of the one set up with your domain, in order to help them control junk email being sent out through their network. You can find out what their SMTP server is by contacting the ISP's technical support or looking it up on their website. A key difference in how an email client works compared with a webbased interface is that the email client downloads the contents of the mailbox to your computer's hard drive and removes them from your mailbox on the server. This way, you can store as much old email as your hard drive can hold and you rarely have to worry about your disk space on the server getting full as long as you check your mail frequently. If you go a long time without checking your email or you receive several large attachments, then your mailbox on the server can still get full, but as soon as you check your mail with the mail client, the mailbox is emptied just like a regular postal mailbox and the cycle starts over. An email client usually also comes with a larger range of features, such as address books, mail filtering and folder storage options, read receipt notices and other things that a web-based program can't handle because it would bog the server down trying to handle all that for hundreds or thousands of accounts. The downside of using an email client is that you can only check the mail from wherever you have the clien Beware the Internet Shark - Hypocrites ograms have fairly limited features.If there is one thing I cannot stand more than anything else, it has to be the internet shark-hypocrite. What do I mean by this? An internet shark-hypocrite is one who goes around parading like your best friend in cyberspace, one who can help you achieve whatever your heart desires, when in fact he is really a lying shark ready to pounce on you at the first scent of blood. In the days since the internet boom, shark-hypocrites have multiplied to the point at which a person in search of some help on the internet, particularly as concerns making some extra money, cannot avoid being attacked by these omnipresent and conniving beasts. Despite their growing numbers, I will not cease to expose them at every turn, trying to educate readers of my articles so that they do not become a sumptuous meal for these lurid creatures.My friends, let’s get some simple facts straight. You cannot make $10,000 a month by buying a program for $47. I challenge anyone who knows a way to show it—and not just to me. Capitalism as a system would come crashing down if such a reality existed. Not everyone can be rich in a capitalistic society. Basic fact one. You can make money on the internet but you have to put in the work and you might also have to invest some money in the form of advertising. Remember. Something does not come from nothing. You need to stay grounded on such basic tenets as these.Now in spite of my caveats here, and in spite of your having read and agreed with the content of this article, in two months you might see yet another alluring program and think, “But this one’s different.” Uh, uh. Think for a second. Any one who found a way to make $10,000 or more a month is probably too busy to tell you about it. For one thing this person will be too busy shopping with any free time left over from his enterprising activities. No 2. Email Clients: You are probably familiar with email programs such as Microsoft Outlook or Eudora. They are what is known as an email client. Email clients can only be accessed from the computer on which the program is installed, but instead of only being able to access one server like the web-based mail programs, an email client can be set up to check multiple email accounts hosted on different servers at the same time. All you need to check an email address from an email account are the following settings:
You already know about the username and password, and the two mail servers tell your email client where to find the web hosting server that your account resides on so that it can connect to the mail software on that computer and allow you to send and receive mail. Whenever you sign up for a web hosting account, the hosting provider will tell you what the names of these servers are, and they are usually related to your domain name. A typical POP3 server name would be mail.mydomain.com or pop3.mydomain.com. The SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) server is a separate part of the server's mail software which handles outgoing email. Its name might look like mail.mydomain.com or smtp.mydomain.com. Most servers require you to check your incoming mail first, and thus verify your identity with your password, before they will allow you to send mail out. On average servers will store this verification for 30 minutes before requiring you to check your mail again. Some internet service providers (ISPs), such as Earthlink and SBC, may require you to use their corporate SMTP servers instead of the one set up with your domain, in order to help them control junk email being sent out through their network. You can find out what their SMTP server is by contacting the ISP's technical support or looking it up on their website. A key difference in how an email client works compared with a webbased interface is that the email client downloads the contents of the mailbox to your computer's hard drive and removes them from your mailbox on the server. This way, you can store as much old email as your hard drive can hold and you rarely have to worry about your disk space on the server getting full as long as you check your mail frequently. If you go a long time without checking your email or you receive several large attachments, then your mailbox on the server can still get full, but as soon as you check your mail with the mail client, the mailbox is emptied just like a regular postal mailbox and the cycle starts over. An email client usually also comes with a larger range of features, such as address books, mail filtering and folder storage options, read receipt notices and other things that a web-based program can't handle because it would bog the server down trying to handle all that for hundreds or thousands of accounts. The downside of using an email client is that you can only check the mail from wherever you have the clien Top Five Web Site Navigation Considerations out. On average servers will store this verification for 30 minutes before requiring you to check your mail again. Some internet service providers (ISPs), such as Earthlink and SBC, may require you to use their corporate SMTP servers instead of the one set up with your domain, in order to help them control junk email being sent out through their network. You can find out what their SMTP server is by contacting the ISP's technical support or looking it up on their website.Have you ever been lost on a highway late at night? It's not a fun feeling.In the same way that it's not fun to be lost on a highway, it's not fun to be lost when visiting a web site. When you create a web site, make sure that it is easy for your visitors to find their way around.Here are some tips:1 - Make your pages consistentThe most important rule is to make your pages and your navigation scheme consistent. Just because you can create 58 different layouts with whiz bang colors and graphics doesn't mean that you should. Put your menu in the same place on every page. Keep consistency across your pages by using the same header or page template. This will help your visitors stay oriented within your web site.2 - Place the menu with careThe most common location for the menu is the left side of the page with menu items running vertically down the page. This generally works best for all but the largest web sites. Many internet users expect to see web site menus in this location too.Alternatively, you may place your menu across the top of your web site. This can be harder to maintain in the long run as you make changes to your site. Also, if you have a long menu, all of your options may not be visible to viewers due the the width of their individual computer screens.3 - Remember the rule of "7 plus or minus 2"Published in psychology journals as early as 1956, the rule of "7 plus or minus 2" states that people can generally process between five and nine pieces of information at a time. When you create your navigation, think about limiting the number of choices to between five and nine. It's not always possible, but it can help to have a reasonable number of choices at each level in your navigation. You'll have to carefully balance putting a limited set of choices with makin A key difference in how an email client works compared with a webbased interface is that the email client downloads the contents of the mailbox to your computer's hard drive and removes them from your mailbox on the server. This way, you can store as much old email as your hard drive can hold and you rarely have to worry about your disk space on the server getting full as long as you check your mail frequently. If you go a long time without checking your email or you receive several large attachments, then your mailbox on the server can still get full, but as soon as you check your mail with the mail client, the mailbox is emptied just like a regular postal mailbox and the cycle starts over. An email client usually also comes with a larger range of features, such as address books, mail filtering and folder storage options, read receipt notices and other things that a web-based program can't handle because it would bog the server down trying to handle all that for hundreds or thousands of accounts. The downside of using an email client is that you can only check the mail from wherever you have the client set up with your account settings entered into it. If you want to check the mail from two different computers, then whichever computer checks the mail first will get it and the other one won't, just like two people checking the corner mailbox. Most email clients have a setting that allows you to leave a copy of messages on the server so that multiple computers can get the same mail, but this has to be carefully coordinated among the different computers involved. A more convenient way to do this is using the IMAP protocol, as you'll see below. Can I use both web-based mail and an email client at the same time? Yes, absolutely. Many people use an email client when they are in their office or at home and check their mail through the web-based interface provided by their web host when they are away from their computer. One does not interfere with the other. What is IMAP? IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol) was designed to solve the problem of checking mail from multiple computers in an email client. When you are checking mail on multiple computers with the POP method, then each computer has its own record of how the mail has been managed. If you delete an old message on one computer and the other computer also has a copy of the same message, you will have to delete it a second time on the other computer in order for both clients to match. IMAP solves this problem by maintaining the mailbox on the server without sacrificing the client software's added functionality. Any client checking an IMAP-enabled email account will see the same mailbox contents no matter where it is, but will still be able to execute all of the functions programmed into the client on that mail as if it were using a POP account. IMAP has the same disadvantages as web-based email in that you are limited to the amount of disk space allowed by your host and access speed is slow because you are accessing a remote server repeatedly. For this reason, IMAP is much less common than POP email. What is an email alias? Suppose your email address is bobsmith@mydomain.com, but you want people to be able to email you at bob@mydomain.com or sales@mydomain.com as well. You don't have to set up three different user accounts if all of that mail is coming to you. Instead you can set up aliases, also called forwarders, to your account, which are other names that forward to the same mailbox. You still have to use the original username to log in and check your mail, but you can set up as many aliases to your account as you want. These would be set up in your web hosting control panel in the user account management section. You can also set up aliases that go to multiple addresses. For instance, if your company has three salespeople each with their own email address, but you want all of them to receive a copy of messages sent to sales@mydomain.com, you don't have to set up an IMAP account on each of their computers. You can simply set up an alias called "sales" that forwards to all three of their addresses, and each will instantly get a copy when an email is received. However, if you have two employees named Bob Smith and Bob Jones, you probably don't want bob@mydomain.com to go to both bobsmith@mydomain.com and bobjones@mydomain.com. In that case it would be better to have unique aliases like "bobs" and "bobj". Can an alias forward mail to an address outside my domain? Yes. Say you've had a Hotmail email account for years and you've just set up hosting for a new domain name. You want to be able to receive email to your new domain, but you really don't want to check multiple accounts. You can set up an alias in your hosting control panel that automatically forwards all mail sent to myname@mydomain.com to myname@hotmail.com. No mail will pile up on your web server, it will simply pass through it like a waypoint before being redirected to your Hotmail account. What is a default or catch-all account? Whenever you set up a web hosting account, you automatically have one user account, the default user, even if you don't set up any others. This user's mailbox is usually set up as a catch-all, meaning that it will receive any email that ends with @mydomain.com that doesn't go to a specific named account. It usually looks like mydomain@mydomain.com. If the only user account you set up is bobsmith@mydomain.com, then that account will receive only mail sent directly to it. If some spammer tries to send an email to rumplestilskin@mydomain.com, it will end up in the catch-all account. Most control panels allow you to change which of your accounts is the catch-all, so you could ignore the default user and have all mail routed to bobsmith@mydomain.com if you wanted. If you really don't care about email sent to batman@mydomain.com, however, you may also choose to blackhole the catch-all, meaning instantly delete whatever comes into it, or you can bounce it so that the sender gets a message saying that address at your domain does not exist. This is usually a wise choice, since most catch-all accounts these days are magnets for junk mail. What is an autoresponder? It's time for you to take that much-needed vacation and you want to make sure that people know you won't be answering your messages for a few days. You can set up an autoresponder in your control panel for a particular user account so that anyone who sends you an email, gets an instant programmed reply. You simply select the account you want to create the autoresponder for, type up the message you want everybody to get, then save it. When you're ready to stop it and answer your own messages again, you can either turn the autoresponder off or delete it, depending on the type of control panel you have. One problem with autoresponders, however, is that they automatically respond to everything. If someone else who has an autoresponder turned on sends you an email, the two servers will quickly wind up in an autoresponder war and both mailboxes will fill up with thousands of messages until they reach their disk space limit or one of the autoresponders is turned off. Conclusion Now that you know how
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Akron, OH and Suburbs Economic Evaluation India is Emerging Market of BPO and KPO Services A Guide to Sell Your Domain Name Quickly
|