My Next Thing to Learn: Email Hosting
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@coliver said:
Zoho has free mail for personal and business domains. I think up-to 5 or 10 accounts. That is what I'm using for my personal domains. They also have a really nice web interface which makes it even better.
That's what I get for not reading
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@thecreativeone91 said:
@coliver said:
Zoho has free mail for personal and business domains. I think up-to 5 or 10 accounts. That is what I'm using for my personal domains. They also have a really nice web interface which makes it even better.
I used to use it, It has some funky issues with folder syncing in the web interface vs imap or activesnyc. it doesn't always match.
I have never had an issue with Zoho
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@Aaron-Studer said:
So then let me pose a new question, how do I setup email forwarding so that any email sent to *@domain.com is forwarded to my gmail?
You could probably go with Postfix.
This is an older article, but is it what you are trying to do? http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/linux-unix-bsd-postfix-forward-email-to-another-account/
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@doyle.jack said:
@Aaron-Studer said:
So then let me pose a new question, how do I setup email forwarding so that any email sent to *@domain.com is forwarded to my gmail?
You could probably go with Postfix.
I agree, for a pure SMTP Relay, Postfix is the best option. A Dev 1 will handle that just fine.
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Doesn't GMail just let you have domain aliases?
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@StrongBad said:
Doesn't GMail just let you have domain aliases?
Only if you pay for Google Apps. They used to have a free tier along with Outlook/Hotmail. But the only free custom domain one now (that I know of) is Zoho.