Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

Questo sito potrebbe offrire funzionalità limitate durante le operazioni di manutenzione per migliorare l'esperienza utente. Se un articolo non risolve il tuo problema e vuoi richiedere supporto, la nostra comunità di supporto è pronta ad aiutarti tramite @FirefoxSupport su Twitter e /r/firefox su Reddit.

Cerca nel supporto

Attenzione alle mail truffa. Mozilla non chiederà mai di chiamare o mandare messaggi a un numero di telefono o di inviare dati personali. Segnalare qualsiasi attività sospetta utilizzando l'opzione “Segnala abuso”.

Ulteriori informazioni

Questa discussione è archiviata. Inserire una nuova richiesta se occorre aiuto.

where a ‘reply to’ address is listed, Tbird should use that address instead of the ‘email address’ entry in creating the FROM file

  • 1 risposta
  • 1 ha questo problema
  • 1 visualizzazione
  • Ultima risposta di Matt

more options

I use an e-mail forwarding service from my university that is my public email address. I use Tbird as the client for my bell.net email account. Receiving e-mails works fine -- the university server forwards to my bell.net address. The problem is in sending e-mails. Bell’s server requires that I use my bell.net address in the ‘email address’ line of the settings, and I use the university address in the ‘reply to’ line. The ‘reply to’ line with the university address appears on my sent emails so that address is used if a simple Reply is made. However, the FROM file in the sent email uses the bell.net address from the ‘email address’ line so if the recipient saves my address to his address book the bell.net address is the one saved. This defeats my goal of having only the university address known. I assume Tbird creates the FROM file. The solution in my view would be where a ‘reply to’ address is listed, for Tbird to use that address instead of the ‘email address’ entry in creating the FROM file. Please advise.

I use an e-mail forwarding service from my university that is my public email address. I use Tbird as the client for my bell.net email account. Receiving e-mails works fine -- the university server forwards to my bell.net address. The problem is in sending e-mails. Bell’s server requires that I use my bell.net address in the ‘email address’ line of the settings, and I use the university address in the ‘reply to’ line. The ‘reply to’ line with the university address appears on my sent emails so that address is used if a simple Reply is made. However, the FROM file in the sent email uses the bell.net address from the ‘email address’ line so if the recipient saves my address to his address book the bell.net address is the one saved. This defeats my goal of having only the university address known. I assume Tbird creates the FROM file. The solution in my view would be where a ‘reply to’ address is listed, for Tbird to use that address instead of the ‘email address’ entry in creating the FROM file. Please advise.

Tutte le risposte (1)

more options

you are talking about changing the fundamentals of email to fit in with your ISP. Perhaps you need to consider something other than the backwards way you are working now to get a decent mail result.

From: To: and Reply-to: are all separate and distinct headers. How mail clients, Thunderbird or others manage the display of email is they take those headers and display their contents.

You are setting the from by using your bell account to send mail. to stop that occurring stop using their server to send mail. Use the university server. I think you will find the ports in the 5-900 range used to send and receive mail are available, even if your provider blocks the server to server port of 25.

If you simply can not get it to work, and it should because people get mail on their phones these days. But if you can not. Use a gmail account to send the mail and register your university account with them as an approved sender.