No, the Outlook app only accepts imap servers. You will have to ask your email provider for an imap. If they dont have one you will have to either get a new address or connect the one you have with a service that provide imap. Example: gmail.com
yes
Many home servers also run e-mail servers that handle e-mail, like windows seven.
Mail servers can broadly be divided in incoming mail servers (POP3 and IMAP) and outgoing mail servers (SMTP). The most popular and well known mail servers are sendmail, Microsoft Exchange Server, Postfix and Exim.
It's but there is no point to use it. Window 7 has its own mail client which is called Windows Mail and it's an upgraded version of outlook express. You can find it in c:\Program Files\Windows Mail\. I try WIN7 go well with outlookexpree 6.
Web servers and mail servers can co-exist on the same machine because they use different ports. The standard port for HTTP is 80, and the standard ports for mail are SMTP 25 and POP3 110.
GMAIL or Yahoo mail.
Windows Mail
Web Servers Mail Servers Application Servers
There are mail servers, FTP servers, Web servers, DNS servers, DHCP Servers, those are the most common types
Yes Windows Mail is available for Windows XP as part of Windows Live.
No.
No, but you can get Windows Live Mail for Windows XP in Windows Live Essentials for XP.