D
DK
Running Office XP, latest service packs. Exchange 2000, current
service pack (3 with rollup) on Windows 2000 on SP4. Outlook is in
Corp/Workgroup mode.
Laptop users are configured to use POP3 e-mail so that when they are
out of the office, they can retrieve their e-mail. (They also have an
Exchange configuration so they can see the Public Folders, resulting
in 2 'Inboxes' in Outlook.) We have set the Exchange configuration to
not send/receive mail so they are onl using POP3 to do so. They want
these laptops to get mail in and out of the office, and not use OWA.
The problem is that when these laptop users send mail to internal
Exchange users, two e-mails are sent, or two are received when someone
internal sends them mail. It looks like it is using both Exchange and
POP3 configs to send the same e-mail at the same time/date stamp.
Whys is this occuring, and what is the best way to resolve, still
allowing mobile users to retrieve their mail remotely (no VPN or
secure tunnel back to the main office)? If we set the laptops to use
Exchange only (eliminate the POP3), mail works just fine, but then
they have no connection to mail remotely.
Thanks, in advance! (And we are turning on the logging to see if we
can locate anything in that regard.)
service pack (3 with rollup) on Windows 2000 on SP4. Outlook is in
Corp/Workgroup mode.
Laptop users are configured to use POP3 e-mail so that when they are
out of the office, they can retrieve their e-mail. (They also have an
Exchange configuration so they can see the Public Folders, resulting
in 2 'Inboxes' in Outlook.) We have set the Exchange configuration to
not send/receive mail so they are onl using POP3 to do so. They want
these laptops to get mail in and out of the office, and not use OWA.
The problem is that when these laptop users send mail to internal
Exchange users, two e-mails are sent, or two are received when someone
internal sends them mail. It looks like it is using both Exchange and
POP3 configs to send the same e-mail at the same time/date stamp.
Whys is this occuring, and what is the best way to resolve, still
allowing mobile users to retrieve their mail remotely (no VPN or
secure tunnel back to the main office)? If we set the laptops to use
Exchange only (eliminate the POP3), mail works just fine, but then
they have no connection to mail remotely.
Thanks, in advance! (And we are turning on the logging to see if we
can locate anything in that regard.)