The Malaysia Email Hosting Blog


Archive for March, 2008

Email delete error

Posted by: pin on: 26 Mar, 2008

“I tried to delete email from Outlook Express but fail. It says Messages could not be moved”

The email folder where you want to delete the email was corrupted. This happens to users with Outlook Express with many emails all kept in the Inbox, or when your PC is not formated and used for quite a while.

Outlook Express keeps all email in DBX format. This file get corupted easily. Go to the Tools > Options > Maintenance > Store Folder to know where is your DBX file. Delete the DBX, but make sure you have turn off Outlook Express and move your message to different folder. Open Outlook Express again and it will generate the new DBX. Now, move the email back to Inbox.

Windows Mail is Outlook Express

Posted by: pin on: 25 Mar, 2008

If you are moving from Windows XP to the latest Vista, Microsoft rebrand and remove Outlook Express and call it Windows Mail now :)

Tracing intermittent SMTP connection

Posted by: pin on: 20 Mar, 2008

Malicious virus can generate large amount of email sending out from the infected PC. If the PC is inside your corporate LAN, it can bring down the upload speed of your connection in your office. This means, you might easily get a ‘Can not connect SMTP server’ error message through your email client.

If the virus uses your SMTP to do the attack, your SMTP should have awared of this. In this case, the useful Email report come into the picture

The number of email with virus (the script trying to spread itself to more people in order to launch DoS attack at a same time) captured was relatively high.

Using the name of virus, you can do a tracing of this virus inside your corporate LAN.

Inconsiderate StreamyX

Posted by: eisen on: 18 Mar, 2008

Hargopal wrote an insightful article on how TM’s unintelligent technical department decided to clamp down on Port 25 (the port where all StreamyX users use to send out emails).

What this means is that if you have subscribed to a Personal Streamyx account, or a Business Broadband (SOHO Package), you may experience problems with sending out emails with the default settings of port 25, especially if you are sending out emails using your own domain name.

If your customers frequently complain of not receiving your emails, this could be a tell tale sign. Users who are using their Streamyx email accounts may not be affected (example@streamyx.com) by this, since it involves emails on hosted domains (eg info@hosteddomain.com).

Personally, I experienced problems with sending out emails from my locally hosted and foreign hosted domains on port 25 and that is when I discovered this countermeasure by TM Net. In my case, my host Webserver has provided an alternative port, 587 for SMTP and this works much more reliably compared to port 25 (since TM Net is performing heavy filtering on this port). Therefore, it is advisable to contact your web host to find out if they have any alternative ports you can use for SMTP, especially if you experience slowness in sending emails.

This has caused major problems with all StreamyX users who are using email hosting services that is tied to Port 25.

I’ve got no problem with TM going about their spam-reducing activities, but heck, they shouldn’t do that on the expenses of the users email hosting services, which is causing a major customer support disaster worldwide!

TM Malaysia, practice some common sense in whatever you do!

“Construction underway to build 10,000 km linear cable system with a capacity of up to 7.68 Tbps to enhance Trans-Pacific connectivity”

A consortium of six international companies announced they have executed agreements to build a high-bandwidth subsea fiber optic cable linking the United States and Japan. The construction of the new Trans-Pacific infrastructure will cost an estimated US$300 million.

The new cable system – named Unity – will address broadband demand by providing much needed capacity to sustain the unprecedented growth in data and Internet traffic between Asia and the United States. Unity is expected to initially increase Trans-Pacific lit cable capacity by about 20 percent, with the potential to add up to 7.68 Terabits per second (Tbps) of bandwidth across the Pacific.



 

  • pin: Lai, you can use the Contact us form in www.1.com.my. Check this out h
  • Lai: Did anybody know 1.com.my contact number?
  • pin: Updates: Jaring, Streamyx and TMNet servers are added
  • Yong: Streamyx, TMNet and Jaring were added into the test list. The test res
  • pin: Thanks Alex. This is very helpful! :)
  • Alex Krenvalk: There is a tool which do it good-