> From: "Bob Atkinson" <bobatk@exchange.microsoft.com>
> > Another common case involves people traveling. If you plug your
> laptop
> > into the network of a hotel or one of your consulting clients, you
> > might prefer to use an envelope and From header address at your home
> > systems instead of room1234@losangeles.merriot.com or
> guest@example.com.
>
> I'd like to understand this scenario better, as at present I am
> confused.
>
> Among my confused thoughts are the following questions: What were the
> steps that led to a mail address and mail server in my hotel room? Which
> part of the hotel's policy forced me into that? Does any hotel actually
> do this? In your understanding, which SMTP server is the STMP client on
> my laptop talking to in order to send it's mail?
>
> I would have expected instead that having got IP connectivity, my mail
> reader on my laptop would have connected back to my normal home (e.g.:
> pop3.mycompany.com/smtp.mycompany.com) and then sent and received mail
> through there as usual, resulting in the normal From headers, etc.
POP3 is fine for fetching accumulated mail from your mailbox
mycompany.com. How do you send mail?
Now that I think about it, I realize I'm thinking of such as running
sendmail/UNIX on the laptop to send mail. My preconceptions run that
way, while others tend to think of personal computers as dumb terminals
connected to a BBS and using IP instead of x-term or some other
specialized protocol largely out of inertia and marketing.
Vernon Schryver vjs@rhyolite.com
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