true
MS Outlook email connects to the outside world and it is much more than memo. When configured properly, you can use it as your frequent email address.
host only
Internal email is electronic mail that only uses a company's internal mail servers. External email makes use of two or more mail servers as the mail is routed, the originating server and the destination server.
jump around and it will work out
If you used after that your computer for a while (couple hours is enough), there is no simple way to do that, actually almost impossilble. Even if you could that it would cost so much that it doesn't worth it. But if you used something different than outlook you might want to check your emails directly on the mail server (yahoo, google depending on which you have). Some email clients configured in a way when it keeps all data on the server but only copies letteres (not removes) on local pcs.
The only way that could work is if the DHCP service and the HTTP service were configured and running on the same physical machine. Otherwise they could not use the same IP address. DHCP and HTTP do not have to be on separate machines (but it is a good idea to separate them in a network). A better question might be why the two services *require* the same IP address.
In a word, Yes. This will work if and only if your network is configured properly. If IP connectivity exists between the two switches, you can have the print server on a different switch.
The DHCP server is not a member of the DnsUpdateProxy security group.
This means that only the web server is included in the package deal, and you need to pay extra for other services, such as email.
Only if u control the mail server...
Microsoft mail server is the high ending machine that stores only Microsoft based mails. In other words these are the servers that sotres emails. when you send an email to a person and that person is not available so the mail server saves your message until the person to whom you wanted to send that messgage log on to his mail address and when he/she does, the mail server sends your message to him/her. That's it.
Each NIC will have it's own IP address for each network it's connected to. so a machine with 3 network cards has at least 3 IPs (one NIC can have multiple IPs if configured that way, you can also tell a NIC to not acquire an IP, but that's kind of uncommon) the VPN server could be configured to only listen on one network interface or all of them. Also the IP addresses assigned to the clients should route them on the NIC with matching IP/netmask, but that can also be configured. you probably want to use a static IP for the interfaces to your VPN server and configure it to only use the network interfaces that you want it to.