Chris Boyd wrote:
On Oct 22, 2009, at 6:14 PM, Lyndon Nerenberg (VE6BBM/VE7TFX) wrote:
My experience is that port 587 isn't used because ISPs block it out-of-hand. Or in the case of Rogers in (at least) Vancouver, hijack it with a proxy that filters out the AUTH parts of the EHLO response, making the whole point of using the submission service ... pointless.
We use 587 quite a lot (with SMTP Auth and SSL/TLS), and have found _very_ few places block or proxy it. We don't have any/many customers in Rogers service areas though.
The biggest reason people don't use it is that it requires some thought and tweaking settings in the "advanced" tab areas of many email clients. Newer email clients are actually starting to look for submission port and SSL support and configuring it autmatically if they find it.
Once it's set up correctly we've found customers really like it since their email "just works" in most places.
I completely agree, and after all was said and done, well worth the effort. Even today, if users use their age-old setup manual to set up an email application, they can receive, but not send. We know why immediately when they call in and state this, and we tell them to expect an email to fix it, and then send them something like this: http://eagle.ca/update/mail/Outlook_Express/index.html ...yes, believe it or not, even with the pictures, they will sometimes still get it wrong ;) Years in planning and implementation, but a good, large-scale learning exercise and the achievement of no port 25 that I'm very proud of. Steve