General Email Help
On the menu to the right is information on how to
configure your email on our servers. Below are some
common email questions.
Common Connection Problems
Email is one of the most reliable communications
mediums once an email makes it onto the Internet,
but almost everyone at some point has a problem with
their basic connection.
If you are having trouble connecting to your email
server, the first thing you should do is check your
underlying Internet connection, for example
by surfing some web pages you haven't visited in
awhile, to make sure it really is a problem with
your email. If you are setting up your email
application for the first time or have recently
changed your configuration, then also double-check
your configuration settings, especially the
server names, email address, and user name, since
this is the most common cause of email connection
problems.
Troubleshooting suggestions for several common email
connection problems are provided below:
- Connection check. If you haven't
received expected mail and want to check the
health of your connection, you can perform the
email version of an Internet ping as
follows:
- Network check. Send a message to any
address that will return a response, such as an
automatic help address or auto responder. You
can also try an incorrect address that will
return an error message like error9876@yahoo.com,
since your server will check with the recipient
server before actually sending the email, but
will still test the network end-to-end. If you
get an email back from any of these methods,
then it is likely your email and Internet
connections are fine.
- Server check. You can try a local
connection check by sending an email to
yourself. If you can receive your own email, but
not external mail, then your server can't access
the Internet for some reason. Give it a bit of
time, and if it doesn't clear up then contact us
for assistance.
Sending Problems
There are several common causes of problems with
sending email:
- Mail queued. If you appear to be able
to send email but it never arrives, it may be in
a queue. Some applications put email in a queue
when you send it, and the user has to manually
send all queued mail to actually transmit it.
Check your File and Edit menus for any queues,
and also check the status of the email in the
Out mailbox to see if it was actually sent -- if
not, send it again.
- Send on check. This is a common
problem -- many email servers are configured to
use the password authentication involved with
checking mail to allow the sending of mail, and
therefore require clients to check for mail at
the same time or just before sending mail. If
you get an intermittent error message and can
send at some times and not others, make sure the
option "send on check" is enabled in your email
settings. As a temporary fix, you can often
solve the problem by manually checking for mail
shortly (a few seconds or minutes) before
sending mail. This problem can also produce the
message "relaying not allowed" described below,
for much the same reason.
- Relaying not allowed. Many Internet
access providers require clients within their
network to use their own servers for sending
mail, as a policy intended to cut down on email
spammers sending spam through other provider's
servers. If you have more than one email address
and can download mail without problems from a
POP account on a different domain than your
Internet access provider, but get the error
"Relaying not allowed" when you try to send,
then you probably need to set the outgoing SMTP
server address to the mail server of your
Internet service provider, instead of your email
provider. Search your Internet network
provider's home page or call technical
assistance to obtain the address of their SMTP
server, and enter it in your email client
settings (first copy and save your existing
server setting in case you need to set it back).
This error message can also be produced by the
"send on check" issue described in the bullet
above.
- Server down. If you can do a
successful connection check, and the above
suggestions don't help, and a recipient
continues to say that email sent from you does
not arrive, and you are certain their address is
spelled correctly, then one of the email servers
between you and your destination is likely down.
Blocked email is typically cached and sent when
the missing server comes back up, usually within
a few hours or days. If the problem persists and
you can successfully send to other email
addresses, then the email provider of your
recipient is likely having a problem -- you
should contact them by phone and ask them if
they are getting email from anyone else, request
they send an email to you, and if necessary
suggest they do a connection check from their
end to help diagnose the problem.
Receiving problems
If you can receive email from some people but not
others, and can do a successful connection check,
then it is likely that your connection is fine and
the sender is having send problems. However, if you
can't receive email from anyone, then try the
following:
- Display checks. First, manually
recheck for new mail again, and then close and
reopen your In mailbox to try and reinitialize
the display trigger. Then resort the In mailbox
by the Date/Time field, usually by clicking on
the Date/Time column header, and then check both
the top and bottom of the mailbox to see if
email was downloaded but listed out of view.
- Filters. Check to see that email you
are looking for isn't being filtered out of your
In mailbox into some other folder before you see
it. Check your filter folders, and if needed use
your email application's "edit / find" function
to search all mailboxes for an identifying
string in the expected email, such as the
sender's email address.
- Configuration problem. If no new
email shows up from the display check, and you
are certain that messages from several sources
are pending, then first check your configuration
settings, especially your incoming POP server,
email address, and user name. If you know your
email password, try deselecting the "save
password" option, closing and restarting the
program, checking for mail, and reentering your
password to reinitialize the connection. If
these suggestions don't work, then contact us
for assistance.
- Lost password. If your email
application saves your password and the
connection was recently broken by a program
crash or similar event, then sometimes you will
be asked to reenter the password as a security
feature. If you are asked for your password when
you try to reconnect, then just re-enter it if
you remember it (often the same as your Internet
logon password), or phone your email provider
for help.
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