Posted by: pin on: 12 Oct, 2008
DNSstuff helps you to configure, monitor and fix problems with your domain and email. This health check tools provide insight into your email hosting server with more than 100 tests. Enter your domain name to run the health check now!
Posted by: pin on: 12 Feb, 2008

I was referred to RealMetrics, the leading publisher of unbiased metrics for online service providers. Their Email Hosting report compares the Uptime, Message Delivery Reliability, Message Delivery Latency, and Support Response Time of the top Email Hosting providers.
Apparently, Mailtrust is in their list and stay at the top-most position, showing undoubtly the most reliable performance. We are proud to be their exclusive partner in Malaysia, visit us at www.1.com.my.
Posted by: pin on: 03 Feb, 2008

Through the TM’s speedometer can give you rough ideas of how fast or the bandwidth of your broadband connection, but I am doubt with how accurate would be the result. As a matter of fact, the speedometer scripts are hosted in servers located in TM’s network. It is considered local and internal peering. If, the scripts are hosted in other data centre in Malaysia such as NTT or Jaring IDC, you may get very different results of what you are expecting!
Yet, another fact is, it is on port 8080, not the standard 80 (http)! This can be misleading!
Posted by: pin on: 30 Jan, 2008
Posted by: pin on: 25 Jan, 2008
“I can’t access your Webmail, but can browse other websites…”
Apparently, customers convince such test confirm that the said Webmail is down! But, this is not always true.
It depends on the location of web servers that host the website. Your ISPs connect you to the outside world using different networks. Problem can occur to just local or international connection.
That means, if the said Webmail is hosted in overseas while customers are browsing a locally hosted website, this will create an assumption that the Webmail is down!
Solution, email servers hosted with geographically-dispersed network in both your country and overseas!
Posted by: pin on: 17 Jan, 2008
“I can browse website, but why I can’t send & receive email using my Outlook Express?”
Website runs on Port 80, different from mail server which uses port 25 or 110. Browsing website means you are downloading data. Your ISP gives you different download and upload speed, it is not the same.
Well, sending out email is different from browsing website. You upload the data (or your mail) to the mail server for delivery.