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  • Thread starter Thread starter New Orleans Novice
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New Orleans Novice

How to create an auto reply?

For MSN Email.

Sometimes it is opened in IE 7.x

Sometimes it is opened in OE 6.x

Server URL:
http://oe.msn.msnmail.hotmail.com/cgi-bin/hmdata

This is an automatically generated Delivery Status Notification.

For any further assistance, please contact your respective Account
Executive.

I apologize for in advance for any inconvenience & hope everyone has a great
day.

Thanks again!
 
New Orleans Novice said:
How to create an auto reply?

For MSN Email.

Sometimes it is opened in IE 7.x

Sometimes it is opened in OE 6.x

Server URL:
http://oe.msn.msnmail.hotmail.com/cgi-bin/hmdata

This is an automatically generated Delivery Status Notification.

For any further assistance, please contact your respective Account
Executive.


Internet Explorer, nor any other browser, is an e-mail client. You will
need to see if the *service* provides an option that you can enable for
an auto-responder. Since MSN uses Hotmail and since Hotmail provides no
auto-responder, that option is not available to you with that e-mail
provider. You could check if your e-mail provider has rules that you
can define to perform the equivalent of an auto-responder. I don't
think Hotmails server-side rules have such an option.

You will need to use a real e-mail client, like the OE that you mention,
to connect to your mailbox that will poll for new mails, yank them, and
then use a rule to perform an auto-reply function. Remember that an
auto-responder, server-side or client rule driven, will reply to all
spam, too.
 
Ayush said:
Replied to [Vanguard]s message :
Internet Explorer, nor any other browser, is an e-mail client.

Wrong ! One example is Opera


You've never heard of bundling? Suppose you used Outlook as your e-mail
client. You think that it really supports NNTP (network news transfer
protocol)? If so, why do you think it opens Outlook EXPRESS to do
newsgroups? Opera's mail support is a *separate* client! I suppose you
think all those pieces in Symantec's Internet Security Suite or McAfee's
bloatware are all just one program, too.

http://www.opera.com/products/desktop/m2/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M2_(e-mail_client)

Integration is NOT the same as substitution or replacement. It is a
SEPARATE mail client program (M2) that comes *with* Opera. "Built-in",
"integrated", or whatever still means it is a separate program. Just
because a common UI might be used doesn't make it all one program. If
that were the case, everything you install is part of one huge program
because it is all accessed under the one UI called Windows.
 
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