| Support Home > Basic Hosting > Administration > E-mail > | Thursday, August 28, 2008 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Configuring E-mail AccountsAccessing your e-mail account through POP3, IMAP or Web MailThe POP protocol accesses a remote mail server that then downloads incoming e-mail to your computer. Think of a POP account as a temporary holding bin for your e-mail. When it is prompted, the server then routes that mail to your computer. E-mail is not stored on the remote server. The IMAP protocol maintains your e-mail account on a remote server. You issue the commands to download, delete, flag, forward, and store messages from your local computer, but your remote server does all the work. IMAP allows you to access your e-mail from any computer; however, it occupies disk space that you might need for other purposes. To learn more about e-mail and how it works, visit HowStuffWorks. If you prefer to use Netscape Communicator, Outlook 2000, Eudora, or any of the other e-mail clients out there, you can configure your account to use POP or IMAP. Depending on which version of an e-mail client you are using, actual configuration steps may vary.
Viewing your e-mail through iManageriManager provides a user-friendly Web-based e-mail client. In addition to sending and receiving mail iManager also provides additional features such as an address book, spam filtering services and more. Your account is ready to use as it is, without further configuration.
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