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"IamTheWalrus" <andy@filterfeeders.org> wrote in message
news:Ow8QeAA+RVVCNw5B@microshade.demon.co.uk... > Hi folks, > > subject says it all really! > > If anyone has got it working could I please (for want of a better > phrase) "pick your brains"? I'm about to try this myself for a customer. From another thread, it seems that the router must be set up as follows: >> Setup is identical to any other ISP (VPI/VCI/Encapsulation >> etc.). For the login-name, you use screen-name@aol.com >> (replacing screen- name with your actual screen name). In the >> AOL software, you also need to set its communications setup to >> use a network connection rather than directly connected modem. >> >> ADSL Line Parameters >> Encapsulation: PPPoA VC-Mux >> VPI=0 >> VCI=38 >> ATMQoS=UBR >> MTU size 1458 change to 1400 <===== AOL-specific ====== >> >> Worked fine using a non-AOL Netgear modem/router The crucial setting seems to be the reduced MTU size. Does anyone know whether AOL has an SMTP server for sending email? The customer uses AOL for sending/reading email, so that will work fine. But her husband will want to send and receive emails using Outlook or Outlook Express from his laptop which will be connected to the router. I presume that he can read his emails via POP3 - most mail servers are set up to allow access from a "foreign" ISP connection. But sending to the corresponding SMTP server is usually not allowed from a "foreign" ISP connection. Hence the need for an AOL SMTP server to send emails via. |
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"Martin Underwood" <me@privacy.net> wrote in
news:4255778a$0$42322$ed2619ec@ptn-nntp-reader02.plus.net: > "IamTheWalrus" <andy@filterfeeders.org> wrote in message > news:Ow8QeAA+RVVCNw5B@microshade.demon.co.uk... >> Hi folks, >> >> subject says it all really! >> >> If anyone has got it working could I please (for want of a better >> phrase) "pick your brains"? The magic numbers are: MTU=1400, RWIN=13600 You have two options: - set the MTU on the router. However, not all routers allow you to do this, and come with a preset value (usually 1500) in which case... - set MTU and RWIN on each PC. Use either DrTCP or TCPOptimizer to do this (Google for downloads) Read about this stuff at AOL keyword 'home networking' I am not an AOL user but have set it up for others. Works just fine. > Does anyone know whether AOL has an SMTP server for sending email? Yes - see below > The customer uses AOL for sending/reading email, so that will work > fine. But her husband will want to send and receive emails using > Outlook or Outlook Express from his laptop which will be connected > to the router. Of course > I presume that he can read his emails via POP3 - No, but there is an alternative - see below > most mail servers are set up to allow access from a "foreign" ISP > connection. But sending to the corresponding SMTP server is > usually not allowed from a "foreign" ISP connection. > > Hence the need for an AOL SMTP server to send emails via. See AOL keyword 'open mail access' and read: <http://members.aol.com/adamkb/aol/mailfaq/imap/> and related links. Hope this helps -- Richard Perkin To email me, change the AT in the address below richard.perkinATmyrealbox.com It's is not, it isn't ain't, and it's it's, not its, if you mean it is. If you don't, it's its. Then too, it's hers. It isn't her's. It isn't our's either. It's ours, and likewise yours and theirs. -- Oxford University Press, Edpress News |
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PPPoe <--- only managed to get on using this protocol
Works fine with a buffalo router, works fine on all aol accounts even silver "IamTheWalrus" <andy@filterfeeders.org> wrote in message news:Ow8QeAA+RVVCNw5B@microshade.demon.co.uk... > Hi folks, > > subject says it all really! > > If anyone has got it working could I please (for want of a better > phrase) "pick your brains"? > > Many thanks. > > -- > IamTheWalrus |
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Incoming email server address: imap.uk.aol.com
Outgoing email server address: SMTP.uk.aol.com The incoming email server is an IMAP server. You will have to ensure that your email application supports the IMAP protocol and will have to select IMAP (not POP3 or HTTP) at some point during the setup process. The SMTP server requires authentication - this means that in order to send an email you must log in with a user name or password to the SMTP server. The user name and password are the same as your AOL Screen Name and AOL password. |
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Martin Underwood wrote:
> Does anyone know whether AOL has an SMTP server for sending email? The > customer uses AOL for sending/reading email, so that will work fine. But her > husband will want to send and receive emails using Outlook or Outlook > Express from his laptop which will be connected to the router. I presume > that he can read his emails via POP3 - most mail servers are set up to allow > access from a "foreign" ISP connection. But sending to the corresponding > SMTP server is usually not allowed from a "foreign" ISP connection. > Hence the need for an AOL SMTP server to send emails via. Not AFAIK. But when I used AOL I was able to use my domain name registrar's SMTP server provided I authenticated through POP first. Don't think AOL provide NNTP either, so perhaps time to investigate something like Clara Mail And News account for tenner a year, and check it will work over AOL Owain |
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