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Setup mail accounts in outlook
Submitted 23 April 2008

On this screen, the name you choose as "Your name", will be the name people see the mail being sent from. The address you use in "E-mail address", will be the email address people see the mail being sent from. Most people choose the email address they are sending from. For example: if your email address is me@me.com, you will most likely want the reply address to be me@me.com

Views: 72 Comments: 0
How to setup SMTP AUTH in Outlook
Submitted 23 April 2008

The following is a simple tutorial on how to setup SMTP AUTH in Outlook. The screenshots taken are from Outlook 2002 but are applicable to most versions of Outlook.You need to make sure you have the SMTP server filled in as detailed below. You should already have the POP3 server name set. For the SMTP server enter:

Views: 59 Comments: 0
Spam filtering
Submitted 23 April 2008

Please note that before requesting the upgrade, you should back up your Address Book, as it won't be copied across. (Click Address Book, then click Import/Export, then click the Export button. To restore your address book, simply click the restore button, and navigate to where you stored the file on your computer.) To access the Spam Filtering options, you will need to go to the spam server, as...

Views: 90 Comments: 0
Mail for Apple Mac OSX 10.5 Leopard
Submitted 23 April 2008

Hopefully this tutorial will get you up and running with your new mail account with 34SP using Mail (for Apple Mac OSX 10.5 (Leopard)). This tutorial assumes you have already set up your mailbox in Plesk and you just require mail set up to connect to that mailbox.

Views: 97 Comments: 0
Mail for Apple Mac
Submitted 23 April 2008

Hopefully this tutorial will get you up and running with your new mail account with 34SP using Mail (for Apple Mac OSX). This tutorial assumes you have already set up your mailbox in Plesk and you just require mail set up to connect to that mailbox.

Views: 67 Comments: 0

If you have not changed anything since the last time you checked / sent mail, do not adjust your settings simply close Outlook (Express), reopen it and try again later. If this has not resolved your problem you need to check your Outlook (Express) settings, making sure that the POP3 (and SMTP if applicable) server(s) are as in the screenshots, and that your full user name and password are...

Views: 81 Comments: 0
Setting up Windows Mobile
Submitted 23 April 2008

This article shows how to use a Windows Mobile device with your 34SP mail account, it assumes that you are also using the additional SMTP service that 34SP can provide for you.TThe following screen collects your primary data, in here enter the relevant data in the fields, the username should be your full email address, if you wish check the save password box as well.

Views: 72 Comments: 0
Thunderbird Setting up mail filters
Submitted 23 April 2008

For those who have purchased the spam filtering option, this tutorial will help you set up message filters in Thunderbird. Please refer to the Thunderbird website for further information. This tutorial assumes you are using IMAP to collect your mail, however the process is identical, if you prefer to use POP3. To set up a new mail filter, click "Tools" in the toolbar, then choose...

Views: 270 Comments: 1
Configuring a Mailing List
Submitted 23 April 2008

he following information is an aid to help you setting up your mailing list. To access the Mailing List configuration screen, you can either click the settings button in siteadmin, or by going to the following URL http://lists.yourdomain.ext/mailman/admin/listname (replacing yourdomain.ext for your domain name, and listname for the name of your mailing list. You will then be able to log in with...

Views: 86 Comments: 0
Introduction to Web Databases
Submitted 30 April 2008

This shouldn't be hard", you think to yourself. You want to buy a computer, so you figure the Internet is the best place to look. You get on Alta Vista, and type "computers" in the text box. It comes back and tells you that it has found about 1 million pages matching your query terms. You try another tactic - you type in "I want to buy a computer". Only 400,000 pages this...

Views: 92 Comments: 0
Using a Search Engine
Submitted 30 April 2008

There are two ways a user talks to a web database - through a type-in box and by selecting choices from a directory structure. This section will examine the more common of the two, the search engine, and will help you to learn the differences between search engines (because, just as the databases are different, so are the search engines) and how to become an effective searcher.

Views: 66 Comments: 0
Using a Pick List
Submitted 30 April 2008

A "pick list", or set of directories and subdirectories used to organize the surrogates, is used by Yahoo, Magellan, and other search engines. These have the advantage of pre-collecting a set of resources about a topic, so if a topic used as a directory heading matches your search topic, these are a quickest and most reliable way to find a starting point for your information.

Views: 84 Comments: 0
Search engines Definition
Submitted 30 April 2008

Search engines compile their databases by employing "spiders" or "robots" ("bots") to crawl through web space from link to link, identifying and perusing pages. Sites with no links to other pages may be missed by spiders altogether. Once the spiders get to a web site, they typically index most of the words on the publicly available pages at the site. Web page owners...

Views: 116 Comments: 0
Metasearch engines
Submitted 30 April 2008

Metasearch engines do not crawl the web compiling their own searchable databases. Instead, they search the databases of multiple sets of individual search engines simultaneously, from a single site and using the same interface. Metasearchers provide a quick way of finding out which engines are retrieving the best results for you in your search.

Views: 111 Comments: 0
Subject directories
Submitted 30 April 2008

Subject directories, unlike search engines, are created and maintained by human editors, not electronic spiders or robots. The editors review and select sites for inclusion in their directories on the basis of previously determined selection criteria. The resources they list are usually annotated. Directories tend to be smaller than search engine databases, typically indexing only the home page or...

Views: 113 Comments: 0
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