Besides an inadvertant device also polling the mailbox (or an attacker doing
so) what might I need to look for, known issues, etc.?
Chris Newell, sysadmin
Shiawassee County (MI) Government
POP is always problematic and I don't know that I'd be inclined to
spend a lot of time chasing down the answer to this. What's the reason
you're having them use OE and POP instead of Outlook or OWA? Onsite or
remote, there is always something better than POP.
And if you need to use POP, there are better clients than OE.
D
And if you need to use POP you should at least use IMAP :)
(but I rarely see this need at all)
"Lanwench [MVP - Exchange]"
<lanw...@heybuddy.donotsendme.unsolicitedmail.atyahoo.com> wrote in message
news:murki51pbidiv2djr...@4ax.com...
"David Kerber" <ns_dkerber@ns_warrenrogersassociates.com> wrote in message
news:MPG.25943ea39...@news.conversent.net...
>The downside here is that I am hosting the mail for a partner orgianzation,
>but I do not support the desktop. I need to rule out a server issue, but I
>am going recommend using IMAP regardless of the client.
Why not just have them use OWA, or Outlook Anywhere (aka RPC over
HTTP)? You don't need to support their desktops.
If you don't want the mail to live on your server at all, then I guess
POP could be fine - but note that it invariably causes problems at
some point, such as you're seeing now. IMAP will keep the mail on your
server and let them sync it ... but then at that point you might as
well have them use OWA or Outlook.
Seems easier to me!