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techblog.jeppson.org | ||
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www.thebacklog.net
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jan.wildeboer.net
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| | | | | 0. The Journey - The basics and outlook (on the series, not the Microsoft mail client ;) 1. Postfix - the in and out, so to say. The robust, battle-hardened connection point for other mail servers on the internet to send emails to and receive emails from your domain(s). Also known as the MTA, the Mail Transfer Agent. 2. Dovecot - where you and your users talk to to get emails to their mail client, be it your smartphone, a mail client on your computer or just even the command line. It's the IMAP server. 3... | |
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sookocheff.com
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| | | | | I recently set up a RAID array wanted to keep notified of any errors that may occur. By default Ubuntu Server sends mail to the root user whenever an error occurs but logging in as root to check mail every so often didn't seem very convenient. There had to be a better way. The best information that I found came from the Ubuntu community forums. Here I'll expand on that discussion, hopefully helping other people who are trying to do the same thing. The traditional way to forward mail is to create a .forward file in your home directory, entering the addresses that you would like to forward mail to. | |
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emilymstark.com
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| | | With the publication of Messaging Layer Security (MLS) as an RFC, I've been pulled into some recent discussion about bringing end-to-end encryption (E2EE) to the web. This is a topic that comes up every so often and has weirdly haunted me throughout my career. (I spent my undergrad and graduate research years working on cryptography implementations in Javascript and how to use them in applications.) | ||