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In article , Roger Halstead
wrote: some reasons: because the provider has proven to be unreliable. If the provider has proven unreliable it is highly unlikely their dial up service used as a server is going to be more so. it turns out that my ISP was able to provide the connectivity but didn't know much about keeping email (and usenet) servers up and running. because it is really to change email addresses. I can change e-mail addresses on my ISPs server in a matter of seconds. I log in, go to the proper URL, create and or delete addresses. It doesn't take much longer than that. When I first starting running my tiny email server, my ISP didn't allow email name changes, never mind have multiple email accounts. [snip] Yet, I do know of one person who insists on using his own server and mail server on cable. Never have figured out why. see above. Nah, it's gotta be more than that. it really is as simple as that in my case. My use of of a home email server is classic geek. His server is less reliable, he moved to cable and although he claims it's static, the IP changes every time he reboots. My ISP's DHCP attempts to give out the same IP. My "dynamic IP" changes only when the ISP needs to move folks to a new subnet (or the DHCP burps bigtime). In the past 6 or 7 years, I might have had 6 or 7 IP changes (and almost that many hostname changes, highway1 to roadrunner to mediaone to attbi...) He has to feed all his machines through one on a different NIC so he can get away with using a server on the cable. Yes, the cable is cheaper and faster than DSL. OTOH, I use web hosting, I pay about $40 a month more than he does, I don't have to service the equipment, I don't have to keep backups, I don't have to do the many things the ISP does to deal with the whole wide world, and my server is legal. Still I have firewalls, virus checkers, spam bots, and the like. -- Bob Noel |
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On Sat, 20 Mar 2004 13:10:18 GMT, Bob Noel
wrote: In article , Roger Halstead wrote: snip My ISP's DHCP attempts to give out the same IP. My "dynamic IP" changes only when the ISP needs to move folks to a new subnet (or the DHCP burps bigtime). In the past 6 or 7 years, I might have had 6 or 7 IP changes (and almost that many hostname changes, highway1 to roadrunner to mediaone to attbi...) Thing is, a reverse look up will show a valid IP so you are still for all effective purposes using a static IP. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com |
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