July 5, 2005 Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google One of the little-known freebies Gmail offers is a portable SMTP server to send mail from any network for any email ...
Google's email platform doesn't have to be Web-based. You can configure Gmail to work in your office with Outlook or Outlook Express by using either POP or IMAP to send and receive messages with your ...
If you use a Gmail email account for your business, you may wish to access it through a desktop or mobile client such as Microsoft Outlook or Mozilla Thunderbird. To configure a Gmail account to work ...
Gmail's intermediate SSL certificate for the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) appears to have expired, causing issues for new users trying to send email via Gmail or Google Apps with the standard.
Anyone who has ever tried to use Gmail as a central hub for their Email has likely fallen prey to one of the service’s annoying flaws: there was no way to use another site’s outgoing SMTP servers to ...
Google's SMTP server, smtp.gmail.com, has just expired a couple minutes ago. Here is the SSL certificate expiration notice: It appears Google has forgotten to renew the certificate, even thought a ...
Google announced this week that it will begin to disable SSLv3 and RC4 a month from now, on June 16. Google clarified this week exactly when it plans to disable support for the RC4 stream cipher and ...
Google Apps customers who still rely on SSLv3 or RC4 need to update to TLS or face the prospect of no longer being able to send out mail Mark your calendars: Google will disable support for the RC4 ...