How to pull emails from POP3 account to Exchange 2000

L

les

Hello,

I want to get emails for half of the people from our organization. However, our provider says that they push only all emails or none. Since we cannot handle all the emails, I wonder if there is a way to pull our emails individually from the POP3 accounts to our Exchange Server. This way we would just pull the accounts that we want.

I wonder if that's possible using MS Exchange 2000 on Win 2000. Please let me if it is possible and if there is any documentation or guiding on that.

Any help is greatly appreciated,
asdf
 
B

Bradley Dinerman [MVP]

Les,

You could set up a POP3 downloader on your server. Small Business
Server includes one with the OS, but that won't do you much good if
you're not using SBS.

I prefer GFI Mail Essentials (www.gfi.com). This is actually a
server-based anti-spam product, but it also includes a POP3 downloader
which does the job nicely for a number of my customers.

Yours,
Brad Dinerman




______________________________________
Bradley J. Dinerman, MVP - Windows Server Systems
Chair, New England Information Security Group
http://www.neisg.org
 
L

les

We actually run Small Business version of MS Exchange 2000.

I've tried to find anything about the POP3 downloader for SMB MS Exchange
2000 and I couldn't find anything. If you could give me any tips where to
start with POP3 downloader I would appreciate.

Thanks a lot,
asdf
 
B

Bradley Dinerman [MVP]

Go into the Exchange Administrator, then drill-down through
"Administrative Groups | First Administrative Group | Routing Groups |
First Routing Group | Connectors | Connector for POP3 Mailboxes."

Right-click on the connector and select Properties. Go to the User
Mailboxes tab and have a blast!

Yours,
Brad
We actually run Small Business version of MS Exchange 2000.

I've tried to find anything about the POP3 downloader for SMB MS Exchange
2000 and I couldn't find anything. If you could give me any tips where to
start with POP3 downloader I would appreciate.

Thanks a lot,
asdf


--


______________________________________
Bradley J. Dinerman, MVP - Windows Server Systems
Chair, New England Information Security Group
http://www.neisg.org
 
L

Lanwench [MVP - Exchange]

Hi, Les -

I've replied to your posts in several other groups - see m.p.win2000.setup
for the first one- if you need to post to multiple groups, it's best to do
so all at once in a single message (separate the NG names with commas) so
that everyone can follow the thread. A lot of people subscribe to multiple
groups, and this way you won't be asking anyone to reproduce someone else's
work, and everyone can benefit.

Crossposting = posting once to several newsgroups within a single message.
This is not a Bad Thing (presuming the list of groups posted to is small,
and all the groups are truly relevant to your question)

Multiposting = posting separate, identical posts to several newsgroups. This
is a Bad Thing. :)

See http://www.aspfaq.com/etiquette.asp?id=5003 and
http://www.blakjak.demon.co.uk/mul_crss.htm
 

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