At 09:35 9/21/2005 Wednesday, Scott Elder wrote: >I'm the Listserv administrator for the University of Houston. We are >preparing for a possible direct hit from Hurricane Rita on Friday, and we >are looking for someone who would be willing to host a list for us for a few >days -- to be used on a backup basis only -- if our Listserv host were to >become temporarily unavailable during the storm. > >It is an announcement-only list for official university announcements to >students, faculty, and staff. The list would not be high-traffic and >probably not used at all (with any luck). It would need to be in place, >probably a week at the most. If I may be permitted to put in my 2-bits ... wouldn't a [relocated] WEB site provide "better" access? The following "off the top of my head" thoughts are just that ... in context of an institutional emergency announcement list relocated to another site: 1) for subscribers to access mail, you usually need a userid/password to that already subscribed list 2) authentication services may be problematic 3) frequently, a POP or IMAP server which may be problematic Now if you are "borrowing" another workstation, either from a friend, or public lab/library especially in an unfamiliar environment/setup, there may be workstation or personal "client" issues, especially if you don't remember details of POP/IMAP server, use of a different userid/password, storage/caching of details. Thus, I would think that a publically accessible WEB page on a familiar resource that requires no authentication by the client would be the superior solution for the situation sighted/sited/cited. /Pete PS -- see also: http://www.tulane.edu/