psemianonymous
Programmer
First off, I'm a student.
I have two POP email accounts--one with the school, one with a web hosting service. I have a third account with my ISP (cable Internet provider), but it is totally unused and I don't care about it.
It is my understanding that I can only send OUT email using SMTP. And it is also my understanding that I can only send out email via the 'local' SMTP server, i.e. smtp.myisp.net.
So I set up both email accounts with the SMTP server as my local ISP's SMTP server name. This seems to work.
My problem is this: what happens when I move my computer around to a wireless hotpoint? How then do I send my email?
Or if I go to a LAN party (this has happened)--how then should I set up my SMTP so I can send emails?
Do I actually have to 1) discover who my ISP is, 2) change my Outlook Express SMTP settings for each 'Account', 3) send mail, 4) change settings back to normal? Is this what business travelers go through?
I'm basically asking: did I miss something painfully obvious?
Pete
PS--yes, I've tried using IMAP, and I hate it with Outlook Express. So don't mention it as a possibility.
I have two POP email accounts--one with the school, one with a web hosting service. I have a third account with my ISP (cable Internet provider), but it is totally unused and I don't care about it.
It is my understanding that I can only send OUT email using SMTP. And it is also my understanding that I can only send out email via the 'local' SMTP server, i.e. smtp.myisp.net.
So I set up both email accounts with the SMTP server as my local ISP's SMTP server name. This seems to work.
My problem is this: what happens when I move my computer around to a wireless hotpoint? How then do I send my email?
Or if I go to a LAN party (this has happened)--how then should I set up my SMTP so I can send emails?
Do I actually have to 1) discover who my ISP is, 2) change my Outlook Express SMTP settings for each 'Account', 3) send mail, 4) change settings back to normal? Is this what business travelers go through?
I'm basically asking: did I miss something painfully obvious?
Pete
PS--yes, I've tried using IMAP, and I hate it with Outlook Express. So don't mention it as a possibility.