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FAQ:
Email accounts and configuration
Email can either be forwarded to one you already have with another provider (for example HotMail) or it can retrieved from our email servers.
We will
set up your email accounts when your website is created.
POP3/SMTP
Email Accounts
All popular
email software works with our mail servers. Your software
needs to be configured with the correct settings as follows:
The screen
shots used are from Outlook, and are very similar to that
of Netscape.

Inbuilt
email software in Internet Explorer and Netscape is easier
to configure than stand-alone software and, for most people,
is the recommended solution.
Specify
a name by which you wish to reference the account. In the
example we've used Webco.
Next comes
the User Information - this is fairly straight forward (John
Smith and Webco Ltd for example). It also asks for email address
- this is your actual address that you specified when setting
up your account via the admin interface discussed above. Also
select the option to Include this account when doing a full
Send and receive.
Now that
you have completed this section, move onto Severs - these
are the two vital parts of the configuration of your e-mail
account.

Here you
need to specify the mail servers that you are using to connect,
from your local machine to your mailbox on the remote system,
so as you can download messages addressed to you.
Server
Information:
Outgoing
Mail (SMTP): pop.netsite.co.uk
Incoming
Mail (POP3): smtp.netsite.co.uk
Your e-mail
account with Blacklab is a POP3 account, therefore state this
as shown in the example for the incoming mail server.
The next
part Incoming Mail Server: is again vital. You have a username
and password which was chosen when the account was set up
and confirmed to you. Specify the Account name: as shown in
the example using your username and then the password you
have chosen.
The other
options you have within the e-mail client are very much personal
preferences, how often to check for new mail, which news groups
to subscribe to. Basically the only vital characteristics
are the ones described in detail above.
Useful
though, in our experience, is the problem with big emails.
You have the option to break up or delete messages over a
certain size. If
you receive an extremely large message it will sit in your
mailbox and cause problems. When you try to connect to that
mailbox to download it, you will be prevented from doing so
and your connection may time out or close.
You could
ask us to delete the message, but this obviously causes disruption
and inconvenience. Therefore specify a size (default is 60K
but 200/300 k is fine) where your e-mail client will recognise
this and deal with it accordingly.
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