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- <?PHP
-
- define('SUPPORT_TITLE', 'Mailboxes and e-mail addresses');
-
- define('SUPPORT_BTITLE', 'Mailboxes and e-mail addresses');
-
- if (!defined('LIB_ACCOUNT')) { require('lib/account.php'); }
-
- // addDashboardItem('Related articles', 'How to add a site', 'support/019');
-
- if (!defined('UID')) {
- addDashboardItem('Useful links', 'Login', 'login');
- }
-
- $sbody = "
- <p>
- An e-mail account on UTD-Hosting consists of two parts: a mailbox and one or
- more e-mail addresses that point to that mailbox. A mailbox is a container
- that stores your messages until your e-mail client downloads them (like a
- letter box holds letters until you fetch them). You can have one or more
- e-mail addresses pointing to each mailbox, and any e-mail sent to these
- addresses is placed in the mailbox.
- </p>
- <p>
- For example, if you own the domain <em>example.com</em>, and want to set up
- e-mail accounts for two users, bob and alice, you would set up two mailboxes
- and two e-mail addresses. The mailboxes could be called <em>bob@example.com</em>
- and <em>alice@example.com</em> (although it's not really that important), and
- the e-mail addresses will be the same:
- </p>
- <img src=\"".CP_PATH."res/mbox1.png\" alt=\"Mailbox diagram\">
- <p>
- Now suppose that bob also wants to receive e-mail sent to
- <em>admin@example.com</em>. You create another e-mail address, but map it to
- the same mailbox as his other e-mail address:
- </p>
- <img src=\"".CP_PATH."res/mbox2.png\" alt=\"Mailbox diagram\">
- <p>
- Now when bob's e-mail client connects to his mailbox, he will receive mail
- sent to both e-mail addresses.
- </p>
- ";
-
- define('SUPPORT_BODY', $sbody);
-
- ?>
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