Pigeon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > I seem to be making a habit of being misunderstood at the moment! > Sure, Linux lets you do anything you want - that's why I like it - it > just seemed that the general philosophy was "online all the time". > That of Windoze seems to be "OK, we'll let you be offline most of the > time, but we'll keep wanting to go online unexpectedly to do something > you probably wouldn't want if we told you what it was".
But most Windows mailers make you read mail on-line, which is an abomination. > My puzzlement > was due to Linux apparently having a more resource-hungry philosophy > on this point, in contradiction to the usual situation. Must be the > Unix networking heritage. Before I was able to use a cable modem, I was on a dialup connection. At first, the length of a connection was limited, and my monthly fee covered a limited number of hours. I did my best to prevent installed programs from deciding when I would be online. I did not run ppp or my mailer as a daemon (this usually requires overriding the default setup - usually inserting `exit 0' at the top of the startup scripts in /etc/init.d.). The MTA should be configured to queue all mail, and wait for an explicit `runq' before sending. I included runq and mail downloading scripts in the ip-up.d directory. You are correct - the default setting for most packages assume constant internet access, and need to be adjusted for a dialup user. Regards, Bob -- _ |_) _ |_ Robert D. Hilliard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> |_) (_) |_) 1294 S.W. Seagull Way <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Palm City, FL 34990 USA GPG Key ID: 390D6559 -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]