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- Eserv will allow you to organize in-office mail and news exchange
as a local mail server (SMTP, IMAP4 and POP3) and a news server (NNTP)
- In doing so, Eserv will allow you to use such standard mail programs
as MS Internet Mail, MS Internet News, MS Outlook Express, Netscape
Messenger, The Bat, etc.
- Eserv will allow you to work with mail, news and the Internet in
any operating system (Windows 3.1, 9x, NT/2000/XP/.NET, Unix, Mac OS, OS/2,
as well as software operating on IP stacks in DOS)
- Eserv will enable external Internet mail and news deliveries to and from
an in-office server
- Eserv will allow all users of a LAN to operate in the Internet
through just one modem or another Internet connection without having
to allocate an external IP address to each computer in the LAN.
This function is performed by a built-in proxy server
- While working in the Internet, each user can use popular software
- any browser (MS Internet Explorer, Netscape Navigator, Ariadna,
Arena, Opera, Lynx, etc.), FTP clients (CuteFTP, FAR, ReGet, GetRight,
etc.), programs like ICQ and AOL Instant Messenger, and practically
any other software through SocksCapture + Socks5
- Eserv can operate both as an Intranet and Internet server under
the HTTP protocol (a Web server) and the FTP protocol (a file server)
- Eserv can distribute mail not only within the LAN, but also via the
Internet or through RAS connections
- Eserv can work both as a Windows NT service and a "regular" program
with a Windows 95/98/ME/NT/2000/XP user graphic interface
System requirements
- Eserv can work on any computer provided with Windows 9x/ME/NT4/2000/XP/.NET.
Complete with installation, it takes some 3 Mb of HD space.
The server and all the PC's in the local network should have the
TCP/IP protocol. The type of the operating system of the PC's
does not matter in the LAN, as only TCP/IP and client programs
operating under these protocols are needed.
- The PC (the server) on which Eserv is to be installed should
have direct Internet connection through one of its network
interfaces, i.e. via modem or a network card. There is no need
for a fixed external IP address, since Eserv can work through
dialup connections using a dynamic IP address.
- If you want each of your employees to have an individual Email
address, it is very desirable that you obtain from your ISP
a domain name for the company's mail domain. Then the user address
will look like "user_name@company_name". Furthermore, it is
desirable to agree with the provider on redirection of all mail
addressed to your domain to one common mailbox accessible by POP3.
In most cases, no special arrangements are necessary, since most
providers do such mail arrangements automatically while connecting
a company. Exceptions are made in cases when your company has been
given a one-user address of the type
"company_name@provider_domain_name" instead of a domain. In this case
ask your ISP to organize for your company a mail domain.
- If Internet connection is done via a leased line, there is no need
for a common POP3 mailbox for domain mail: the ISP can organize
SMTP transfer of your mail, and no special Eserv setup will be needed.
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