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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: Using local MTA re: tlug: Naive VM question
- To: tlug@example.com
- Subject: Re: Using local MTA re: tlug: Naive VM question
- From: Jonathan Byrne <jpmag@example.com>
- Date: Wed, 06 May 1998 00:28:36 +0900
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- References: <13645.41015.968327.575322@example.com>
- Reply-To: tlug@example.com
- Sender: owner-tlug@example.com
Kei Furuuchi wrote: > > Many people here may take the internet access for granted so they may > not realize the meaning of using local MTA. But, it relieves time > constraint from me: I don't have to get connected to ISP to send a > e-mail or make sure it is being sent. MTA takes care of it at Umm, I don't exactly follow how this differs from using an ordinary mail client such as Netscape Mail or Eudora on any other machine. For example, if I write e-mail on a dial-up machine, I can just send it to the outbox and leave it there until such time as I connect to an ISP and check my mail. Or, I can have it automatically dial in and send it immediately. How does this differ from what you're describing? I'm connected on a leased line, so it's easy to use sendmail for both mail I send from my Linux machine and also as the MTA for my Windows machine. Connecting to an SMTP server that's only at the other end of a short Ethernet cable is a lot faster than connecting to an SMTP server at Geocities :-) But I would see much less advantage if I were using dial-up access. Once online, I could get great speed by using sendmail, but that would also dictate remaining connected all the time, something only practical during telehoudai hours. The rest of the time - that is, when writing mail in offline mode - I'm not sure what advantage I would get from sendmail. Inquiring minds like mine wanna know :-) > from just using a pc. It becomes transparent internet unless I do > netsurfing. Or is it called intranet? An intranet is a private internal network utilizing Internet technlogies, but which may or may not actually be connected to the Net. A LAN with web servers and stuff on it, serving internal content. > PC98 spec has the detailed power management called ACPI. > I hope somehow Win98 could be successful because that comes with PC98. If > PC98 becomes infrastructure, What power management features do PC98 machines have that standard PCs don't? Jonathan
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