Always Learning wrote:
On Thu, 2011-08-11 at 13:56 -0400, m.roth@5-cent.us wrote:
Craig White wrote:
And that's *EXACTLY* what I'm saying is the wrong thing to do. Dunno where you live, but go ahead, for whoever provides 'Net access to your home: call them up, or email them, and tell them to contact manitu, and to request that manitu put them on a whitelist.
Let me know when they get back to you. I'll look for your email sometime around the time when you move and change providers.
You can not change the world on your own, even a little bit, without some help. Help from mass 'Internet connections' ISP staff is often dependent on not very intelligent people being able to understand your problem and then having the ability to forward-on your concerns to a more skilled person.
That's "people who are deeply trained to ask, as the first question, and not think to the second sentence, until you answer "what is your operating system?", or maybe "have you turned on your computer", or "have you rebooted your computer", and the idea that the problem is on *their* end is out of the room.
Try getting one of them to ping your cable modem when the *ethernet* port burns out, but the coax port is fine. Last time I had to, it took about 10 min before she went to talk to her manager....
Your task can be onerous and arduous and it will consume your ever decreasing free-time.
Be pragmatic. Accept partial defeat. Get an alternative email arrangement and you may become more happier.
NO. I WILL *NOT* allow the goddamned spammers to block me from the 'Net, and I'm *not* willing to have them cost me my email, and go to somewhere else; certainly not to someone's suggestion of yahoo (and they aren't banned by manitu?)
Incidentally as you run your own mail via Bluehost are you actually affected, at the moment, by manitu because, presumably, you can send-out by BH ?
You misunderstand: I pay them for hosting. They provide the mailserver; it just comes from my domain on my virtual host on their servers. I don't run a business, so I'm not going to pay a *lot* more than $6US/mo to run my own mailserver....
mark