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DerekAustin26 wrote: » I thought when your online and connected in Microsoft Outlook you are already connected to the SMTP server, so there is no use for the POP3 protocol.
DerekAustin26 wrote: » i just said that.
Mishra wrote: » Thats not what you said. You said that SMTP was for sending mail and POP3 was for receiving mail. These 2 references do not go together. Tiersten said that SMTP was used for communication which means sending/receiving. In order to get a good understanding of what is going on; telnet into a SMTP server using port 25 (smtp port) [telnet your.smtpserver.com 25] then google how to talk SMTP and try to send a piece of mail to a correct address. You should be able to do this on most mail serves, even yahoo/google.
DerekAustin26 wrote: » I thought when your online and connected in Microsoft Outlook you are already connected to the SMTP server? Is this true or false?
DerekAustin26 wrote: » SMTP is for sending email and thats it.
kalebksp wrote: » As Mishra and Tiersten said, SMTP is used by email servers to send and receive mail. When Server A sends email to email Server B, Server A is sending using SMTP and Server B is receiving using SMTP.
CChN wrote: » Read my post! You have established a TCP connection. Now, what protocol is going to DL your e-mail after doing so?
DerekAustin26 wrote: » SMTP = Sending email POP3 = Retrieving email is this correct? I thought when your online and connected in Microsoft Outlook you are already connected to the SMTP server, so there is no use for the POP3 protocol. If so, what are the specific reasons why you would use POP3?
DerekAustin26 wrote: » I strongly disagree.. I may have started this forum, but I do know what SMTP is. SMTP is only for sending email. look it up. The SMTP SERVER "Receives" the mail, but the Protocol itself is not retrieving ****. Thats for the POP3 protocol.
DerekAustin26 wrote: » Okay one more question then... If POP3 is pulling the mail off the SMTP Server, then where is the mail going? Because obviously its not going to your harddrive unless you are archiving(pst file etc..)What is holding the mail after you retrieve it from the SMTP Server? Before you say "Mail Client" - well the Mail Client is just software and software is ran by your RAM. I want a clear cut answer here.. Where is the mail stored after you retrieve it from the SMTP Server?
DerekAustin26 wrote: » Okay one more question then... If POP3 is pulling the mail off the SMTP Server, then where is the mail going? Because obviously its not going to your harddrive unless you are archiving(pst file etc..) Before you say "Mail Client" - well the Mail Client is just software and software is ran by your RAM. I want a clear cut answer here.. Where is the mail stored after you retrieve it from the SMTP Server?
tiersten wrote: » I don't know why you're discounting your mail client. Why do you say it obviously isn't going to your hard drive? Assuming you're not using IMAP or Exchange which store email on the remote server then it is all kept in a PST file by Outlook. If you are using IMAP or Exchange then Outlook will ask the server what email is in the particular folder you're interested in and show you the contents.
gojericho0 wrote: » What everyone has been telling you is absolutely true SMTP protocol can and is used to receive email, but is done so primary server to server. It just can't pull it on demand. It has to wait until a SMTP session is established from another server. POP3 can pull email and is why it is used on clients. So you can receive on demand.
rwwest7 wrote: » Exactly. If you're using POP3, then the message is stored on your local hard drive. You can configure Outlook to leave a copy on the server or remove it from the server, thats your choice. But there is always a copy on you local hard drive IF you're using POP3.
DerekAustin26 wrote: » Here's my understanding.. Obviously we have established pop3 "pulls" but now the question is.. where's it going next? And what i understand, is that A: Its going to your harddrive or B: it's going to a remote server/domain depending on your configuration That sound right?
DerekAustin26 wrote: » Here's my understanding.. Obviously we have established pop3 "pulls" but now the question is.. where's it going next? And what i understand, is that A: Its going to your harddrive orB: it's going to a remote server/domaindepending on your configuration That sound right?
gojericho0 wrote: » POP stores mail on your hard drive. Thats why you have to download the mail and you can delete or move messages without it effecting the server. This is not normally used in an enterprise environment because it is not portable, scalable, secure, and very hard to manage
lildeezul wrote: » please read all the post
is this correct?
I thought when your online and connected in Microsoft Outlook you are already connected to the SMTP server, so there is no use for the POP3 protocol.
If so, what are the specific reasons why you would use POP3?
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