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From: Marie L Barnett <MLBarnett@drhorton.com>
To: Meagan Browder <m.browder@paihhi.com>, 'Steven Anderson'
<s.anderson@paihhi.com>
Subject: RE: Coffee Pointe: Hot coal receptacles
Thread-Topic: Coffee Pointe: Hot coal receptacles
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Date: Fri, 8 Mar 2013 13:56:09 +0000
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you don't
I am having difficulty when replying from a mail received from a supplier it comes back to my mail with a message : mailer-daemon. How can I solve this?
Just reconfigure your mail server...You will find somewhere where it says "Mail Daemon" and choose the suitable option for you.
Can someone tell me how to get rid of the mailer deamon in my mail PLEASE
I too would like the answer to this as I am inundated with mailer daemon telling me that I am sending out hundreds of emails when I am not.
You got a mailer-daemon because you SENT an email to an incorrect or non-existant email account. The solution is not to send emails to that address anymore.
You dont need to open it, it means the e-mail address you used is no longer in use..
raping little girls
Yes. The other people will still get the mail.
Errors sent by mailer-daemon in most cases occur due to a typing error. You may have exceeded 50 hops in the email you send.
First off. A daemon is usually a name for a sever or service in Unix. The word daemon was originally used to describe FreeBSD network services (as their logo is a daemon). However the term has become more widely adopted through networking and many cross platform services user the term. A mailer daemon is a more technical term for "email server". If a message fails to be delivered, the daemon will return it to you along with an error message, the route it took and where it failed.
A person or an organization who sends the mail is called a mailer
The Mailer Daemon is a resident on the mail server, and despite its name is not evil so much as a tireless worker. Some think the Daemon title was given because its job is so thankless (telling people the address was typed wrong, the mail is undeliverable, the mailbox is full, etc); others believe it is a reference to Terry Pratchett's imps, though I believe the chronology doesn't bear that out. Regardless, to never again encounter the mailer daemon, either never again send a letter, or make very sure your recipients' names are typed correctly and their mailboxes have enough room. If you have trouble with attachments, it may be your outgoing mail service's rules don't allow you to send anything that big/that type/etc.