This is the second person to encounter the following problem. Both have involved dist jobs going through UCSFVM. I've change the list default to FULLBSMTP since it appears to be a BSMTP "To:" record missing. Does anyone have any other ideas? Brent Stilley, Oklahoma State University, 113 Math Sciences, Stillwater, 74078 ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- Any idea why I got this piece of mail bounced to me when I sent in a posting to CCMAIL-L? Below is exactly what I got. Let me know. -Bruce /-----------------------------------------------------------------------------\ |Bruce Robertson, Senior Editor, Network Computing Magazine | | Internet Email: [log in to unmask] | | Phone: 415 723-3236, FAX 415 723-0010 (put name and voice # on cover sheet) | | c/o Stanford University, 115 Pine Hall, Stanford, CA 94305 | \-----------------------------------------------------------------------------/ Received: by ccmail from UCSFVM.UCSF.EDU >From @UCSFVM.UCSF.EDU:[log in to unmask] X-Envelope-From: @UCSFVM.UCSF.EDU:[log in to unmask] Received: from CCMAIL.UCSF.EDU by UCSFVM.UCSF.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R1) with TCP; Mon, 29 Mar 93 09:31:28 PST Received: from cc:Mail by CCMAIL.UCSF.EDU (1.30/SMTPLink) id A02507; Mon, 29 Mar 93 09:34:26 PST Date: Mon, 29 Mar 93 09:34:26 PST From: <[log in to unmask]> Message-ID: <[log in to unmask]> To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Questions on cc:Mail Remote (for Mac) Returned Mail: Could not find any To: or Cc: recipients. *** Returned Mail Message Follows: *** ([128.218.1.41]) by CCMAIL.UCSF.EDU (SMTPSRV); Mon 29 Mar 1993 09:27 Received: from UCSFVM.UCSF.EDU with BSMTP id 6205; Mon, 29 Mar 93 08:27:07 PST Received: from VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU by UCSFVM.UCSF.EDU (Mailer R2.08 PTF008) with BSMTP id 4506; Mon, 29 Mar 93 08:27:07 PST Received: from VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU (NJE origin LISTSERV@UIUCVMD) by VMD.CSO.UIUC.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 3475; Mon, 29 Mar 1993 10:30:52 -0600 Date: Mon, 29 Mar 1993 08:32:27 PST Reply-To: "cc:Mail Interest Group" <[log in to unmask]> Sender: "cc:Mail Interest Group" <[log in to unmask]> From: [log in to unmask] Subject: Questions on cc:Mail Remote (for Mac) Comments: To: [log in to unmask] To: Multiple recipients of list CCMAIL-L <[log in to unmask]> Anyone have experience with the cc:Mail Remote clients, specifically the new Mac one? I'm going to set that up for Powerbook dialin, but have found the documentation hasn't covered the few pertinent questions that I wanted to know in any easily accessed location. They are: Does the cc:Mail Remote allow you to keep folders on the portable node, rather than on the main mail server? Does it REQUIRE this? If so, how does one get the portable folders reconciled with the main folders you have at the office? I see there's a restriction by message size on downloads, but does this apply to attachments, or message contents or both? Are there any real differences between the Mac and DOS remotes that one wouldn't expect given the difference between the 2.0 Mac and DOS local clients? What can't you do from the remote that you can do locally? You can still address mail via gateways and such, right? I've only been running an SMTP gateway (the new 2.01) on my cc:Mail system, and not yet the cc:Mail router software. Is there anyway to run both the remote host stuff and the SMTP on the same extra DOS machine? Otherwise, any pointers on how to configure that machine? Can I expect this machine to "hang" as often as typical pcAnywhere dial-in hosts do (that's twice a week or so)? Anyone know where to get Apple Comm Toolbox "scripts" for modems not in the batch sent with the Mac client software? Are these scripts the same as Apple Remote Access scripts? One read of the way that remote users get their directory info was enough to confuse me. It doesn't happen automatically? Can anyone provide the simple guide to what needs to be done? Thanks for your help in advance. I'm at the mercy of short time and confusing documentation (ie, long on steps and short on overview). -Bruce /-----------------------------------------------------------------------------\ |Bruce Robertson, Senior Editor, Network Computing Magazine | | Internet Email: [log in to unmask] | | Phone: 415 723-3236, FAX 415 723-0010 (put name and voice # on cover sheet) | | c/o Stanford University, 115 Pine Hall, Stanford, CA 94305 | \-----------------------------------------------------------------------------/