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Old February 18th 09, 04:36 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.inetexplorer.ie6_outlookexpress
Rich/rerat
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Posts: 134
Default Sending Mail Problem

Noel S Pamfree,
In addition to what Bruce has advised, you may also tell your friend, that they
should increase the "time out" setting for that account, on the Advance tab, for
the account's properties window, to at least 2 mins.

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"Bruce Hagen" wrote in message
...
Remove McAfee. Reinstall in custom mode and uncheck e-mail scanning when you
see the option. (I would remove McAfee completely if it were my machine).

Canned

Turn off e-mail scanning in your anti-virus program. It is a redundant layer
of protection that eats up CPUs, slows down sending and receiving, and
causes a multitude of problems such as time-outs, account setting changes
and has even been responsible for lose of messages. Your up-to-date A/V
program will continue to protect you sufficiently. For more, see:
http://www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#3

Note that for some AV programs, it may be necessary to uninstall the program
and reinstall in Custom Mode and uncheck e-mail scanning when the option
arises.

Turning off e-mail scanning is safe. See:

Viral Irony: The Most Common Cause of Corruption:
http://www.microsoft.com/windows/IE/...ion.mspx#EOAAC

Why you don't need your anti-virus to scan your email:
http://thundercloud.net/infoave/tuto...ning/index.htm

Turn off email scanning in your antivirus softwa
http://www.oehelp.com/OETips.aspx#3

And this is from Symantec, but applies to all anti-virus programs.

From:
http://snipurl.com/bmf6

Is my computer still protected against viruses if I disable Email Scanning?

Disabling Email Scanning does not leave you unprotected against viruses that
are distributed as email attachments. Norton AntiVirus Auto-Protect scans
incoming files as they are saved to your hard drive, including email and
email attachments. Email Scanning is just another layer on top of this. To
make sure that Auto-Protect is providing the maximum protection, keep
Auto-Protect enabled and run LiveUpdate regularly to ensure that you have
the most recent virus definitions.
--

Bruce Hagen
MS-MVP Outlook Express
Imperial Beach, CA


"Noel S Pamfree" wrote in message
...
Although my friend's Outlook Express (Windows XP) will eventually send
emails I can't solve a problem. Here is the low down:

Her options are set to check for emails on start-up and to send emails
immediately.

When she writes an email it moves to the outbox and 'connecting' appears.
After 60 seconds the error message appears saying that the server is not
responding. If I click 'cancel' then 'send' immediately the email goes
without any problem. The problem has persisted for over two weeks so I
don't think the ISP mailserver can be at fault.

The fact that the email goes eventually leads me to believe that the
server information and password must be correct.

I deleted the account and created a new one in case it had become
corrupted but it made no difference.

I thought I had solved the problem by removing the tick from the 'Send
immediately' and clicking on 'Send' manually. This appeared to work at
first as the message did go straight away but when I closed OE and
restarted it the problem persisted.

The only other information I can add is that there were no problems
sending emails for 2 years but this has recently started. She uses McAffee
as a virus checker and email scanner.

Any ideas as to the problem would be greatly appreciated.

Noel


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