Sunday, November 1, 2009

Re: Cake Hosting - Who is the best?

True. Partially I've done it this way because the email is just for
me. The users don't get email accounts.

On Nov 1, 5:44 am, Jon Bennett <jmbenn...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > There are good guides on setting up your own mailserver as well.  I
> > set up my mailserver using postfix and simply forward all mail to my
> > main gmail account.  I have gmail set up so that when I reply, gmail
> > logs into my site's mailserver to send.  Works like a charm.
>
> I wonder why you've done it that way though. If you're going to send
> through gmail, why not use their mailservers (and excellent anti-spam
> filtering!) for free?http://www.google.com/apps/intl/en/group/index.html
>
> A major benefit of going this route is you separate your hosting and
> email, which means switching hosting is a case of deploying your app
> files and setting DNS, no messy email migration etc. It also means you
> can give your clients a GUI to manage their email to create users etc,
> taking you out of the loop for support :)
>
> cheers,
>
> j
>
> --
> jon bennett -www.jben.net- blog.jben.net
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