DrPhill":1qcvleew said:
I only use talk-talk as an email 'provider' as they are my (current) ISP; I want my email solution to be 'portable' - in as much as if/when I leave TalkTalk I just have to adjust a couple of settings (forwarding from my domain, outgoing settings from Thunderbird) and 'Robert the long distance truck driver is your mothers live in lover' as they say.
I admit to being a little confused over the details of the email world, and thought I had a good solution. It seems though that the number of my emails automatically winding up in spamboxes has increased of late. Eg, my wife's yahoo account. I am sure my wife has not chosen to mark my mail as spam. Well, pretty sure....... hmmmm
Phil
I assume you have a domain -
http://www.whatever.com - that is registered to you. It sounds like you have a website "on" it?
Email the hosting provider who hosts your website and ask if your hosting package comes with SMPT\POP3 mailboxes? Or just POP3 for inbound? Or redirects?
Once you have the answer to these questions you'll be more informed to decide how to progress.
As an example - a truly portable email setup, is one where your email is hosting externally to your ISP and your email address will always be
[email protected] no matter who your ISP is.
Your mail client (Thunderbird) is configured such that,
Incoming Mail - is retrieved via POP3 from mail.whatever.com (i.e. your domain) on port 110
Outgoing Mail - is sent via SMTP-AUTH (authenticated SMTP) from mail.whatever.com on port 225 (or 2225 as most ISPs will block outgoing mail on port 25).
Both incoming and outgoing mail require a username (most likely your email address) and a password - this will be set using the web hosting control panel.
You can then retrieve and send email - regardless of who your ISP is.
HIH
Dibs