fivemack: (Default)
[personal profile] fivemack
The company I work for would like to stop devoting local admin effort to its email.

There are perhaps a dozen of us, we also have half a dozen mailing lists which we'd like to see archived. We'd like authenticated webmail access.

I think what we want is a service which will run an IMAP server for us, and provide webmail access and mailing-list service. A significantly worse alternative would be a coloced Linux-box with RAID disc and with a minion to sort out backup tapes and to swap out discs when they fail, since we'd still have to manage it, and if the computer itself failed we'd have to go to the bother of setting up another one (with newer hardware, hence newer kernel, software faff, backup faff ...)

Googling on 'email outsourcing' finds me organizations happy to work with corporations who want as few as ten thousand accounts.

Another question: how practical is it to use securID or similar one-time passwords in a ten-person company? Will EDS deign to listen to a request for ten securIDs?

Date: 2007-07-09 02:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dd-b.livejournal.com
Any modern web hosting account will handle what you want, I think. Mine at dreamhost.com does, it's handling email for dd-b.net and demesne.com and aacfi.com and dragaera.info, including mailing lists and such. Pop, imap, and webmail access. I forget if I have *no* limit on mailboxes, or if it's just so high I can't see it from here (many many thousands). They don't have to be also handling the DNS or web service for real. I don't think they even have to *think* they are.

I'd also check what pobox.com will do; I know several people handling an individual email account there, and they say they do corporate stuff, but I'm not sure whether you might fall in a middle ground that wasn't well-served.

March 2024

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24 252627282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Oct. 30th, 2025 05:58 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios