<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/strict.dtd"><html><head><meta name="qrichtext" content="1" /><style type="text/css">p, li { white-space: pre-wrap; }</style></head><body style=" font-family:'Sans Serif'; font-size:10pt; font-weight:400; font-style:normal;">On Monday 09 March 2009 20:32:37 Anne Wilson wrote:<br>
> Having said that, you don't actually need to have two sending accounts. <br>
> You can opt to send everything through your ISP's server, using your gmail<br>
> identity as well as the other one. This is the simple way, and will just<br>
> work.<br>
<p style="-qt-paragraph-type:empty; margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:0px; margin-left:0px; margin-right:0px; -qt-block-indent:0; text-indent:0px; -qt-user-state:0;"><br></p>You can run into problems with that. e.g. GMX has a option to mark everything as spam what is not sent over others mail providers mailhost.<br>
<p style="-qt-paragraph-type:empty; margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:0px; margin-left:0px; margin-right:0px; -qt-block-indent:0; text-indent:0px; -qt-user-state:0;"><br></p>So if you send a gmail message on your own, then GMX will just mark it as spam because it is not transmitted over an official gmail SMTP server...<br>
<p style="-qt-paragraph-type:empty; margin-top:0px; margin-bottom:0px; margin-left:0px; margin-right:0px; -qt-block-indent:0; text-indent:0px; -qt-user-state:0;"><br></p>Bye...Frank</p></body></html>