R
Robert (AAT)
We are small company and in the process of implementing SBS2003.
Previously we all had direct e-mail access through a peer to peer network
and a DSL connection. Inter company communication was all through POP. Being
able to share calenders and contacts is attractive for us.
Before I started with the Exchange implementation my expectation was that I
would have an Exchange mailbox for internal mail and our existing Outlook
..PST folder. And that each application would work side by side, i.e. the old
..PST would check e-mail directly through the Internet.
What I've seen so far is that OL can deliver mail only to one inbox. If
Exchange is installed it insists on delivering to the exchange box. In fact
it insist through the POP connector that Exchange retrieves e-mail directly
from the POP accounts. Is this correct or is there a workaround?
We are frequent travellers and want to be able to connect to the Internet to
retrieve e-mail without connecting to SBS. Is that possible?
Any suggestions are welcome.
Robert
Previously we all had direct e-mail access through a peer to peer network
and a DSL connection. Inter company communication was all through POP. Being
able to share calenders and contacts is attractive for us.
Before I started with the Exchange implementation my expectation was that I
would have an Exchange mailbox for internal mail and our existing Outlook
..PST folder. And that each application would work side by side, i.e. the old
..PST would check e-mail directly through the Internet.
What I've seen so far is that OL can deliver mail only to one inbox. If
Exchange is installed it insists on delivering to the exchange box. In fact
it insist through the POP connector that Exchange retrieves e-mail directly
from the POP accounts. Is this correct or is there a workaround?
We are frequent travellers and want to be able to connect to the Internet to
retrieve e-mail without connecting to SBS. Is that possible?
Any suggestions are welcome.
Robert