Are you saying when you telnet to port 25 from the external PC, did the Helo, Mail From:,RCPT To:, sequence of commands, you were able to receive a mail at your mail server? If you are able to do that, there shouldn't be a problem receiving emails from the internet.
For the smtp virtual server...
If your NT Server and 2003 are in 2 different domains, then it may be just setting up trust relations between the 2 domains in the Active Directory Domains and Trusts. Also, make sure the 2003 is pointing to an internal DNS, with Dynamic updates allowed, preferably setup in the 2003 server...
Since you are using Group Policy, There's a setting in it where you can Customise the Homepage. It's under User Config -> Windows Settings -> Internet Explorer Maint -> Important URLs. It should work for your W2k Pro clients.
You say the users currently can log in to the OWA server directly without going through the primary webserver? Then I think the problem lies with the link pointing to the OWA server on the primary webserver. For the link, did you specify a URL of the OWA server, or to the M: driver folder on the...
Never tried it myself, but I think you need to install Exchange Enterprise edition for the Front end Server, then disable certain services for the Front End and Back end as per this article...
I think you need to setup your new Webserver as an Exchange Frontend Server so that OWA will reside on the webserver with your Information store residing on your current Exchange Server.
On your Exchange Server, go to Active Directory Users and Computers, Select View and set to Advanced Features. Then go to the properties of the affected user, select Exchange Advanced, and protocol settings. Select HTTP protocol, and click the settings button. Check the enable for mailbox.
Well, I don't own a HP NAS, but most NAS should be accessible in a Web Browser to configure settings in the NAS. Type the IP address of the NAS or its NetBios name in the Browser, and provided you know the Administrator password of the NAS, you should be able to access the configuration page...
You could try a few things: Remove/Reinstall Outlook; Remove/Reinstall TCP/IP from the Win2000. Does this happen only to one user and that particular system?
Another solution to resolve this problem is to execute the following 2 commands on the E2k Server - IPCONFIG/FLUSHDNS and IPCONFIG/REGISTERDNS. Check the Event Viewer after 15mins. If it reports one of the global catalog servers needs to be rebooted, simply reboot that GCS.
This worked for me...
If it is just serving as a DHCP server and nothing else, you could try setting up another DHCP server on another Server, then rebuild this Win2k Server. You could also try booting up to Safe mode to see if you can log in and check available freespace etc.
I had the same problem once. I resolved the problem by applying a fix taken from Microsoft MCSE Training kit for Exchange 2000. You need to edit the Registry of the Exchange 2000 server to statically reference the global catolog server. In the Registry, go to
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE...
I believe what you want is to set passwords to each personal folders for Outlook. Go to Control Panel, click on the Mail icon, and select the properties for the Personal Folder(s). You cn then set a password for each profile's personal folder.
Probably, for the user's mail program eg. Outlook Express, he needs to set the authentication. For OE, Open Tools->Accounts->Mail, and select the mail server properties. Under Server tab, select My Server requires authentication, and specify accordingly
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