This is a common question from corporate users, and the answer can be difficult because of the various ways that your network and server(s) may be configured. In this brief article I will try to touch upon the basic principles and give you enough information to at least understand what your specific configuration is and what needs to be changed.
First off, let's clarify some terminology:
Sync: To synchronize data, typically meaning mail/calendar/tasks. Outlook and Exchange have a special proprietary connection which keeps data synchronized between client and server. There is no true Exchange client for the Pocket PC.
POP3 & IMAP4: These are industry standard mail protocols. IMAP is a sync protocol.
Firewall: A device that blocks specific TCP ports (think of them as specific internet services like mail, web, FTP) from being accessed on your internal servers from the internet. A firewall is configurable for specific needs and access.
VPN: Virtual Private Network; a software layer that is established between two points on the internet and provides for secure data transfer. This is typically between a laptop/home user and a firewall device at a company. This basically "punches a hole" in the firewall for the authenticated VPN client user.
Active Directory: This is an authentication protocol used in 2000 Server, Exchange 2000, and newer. It can also run in "mixed mode" if you have older servers (IE, NT).
MIS: Mobile Information Server; this is software from Microsoft which allows you to do a full remote sync with Exchange. It will sync mail/calendar/tasks, but it takes much more time and data. This is generally impractical unless you have a large data transfer budget or have very little data to sync. MIS can NOT be run on a mixed-mode Active Directory installation nor on the old NT authentication scheme. You need to use it with native mode Active Directory only.
Now the absolute easiest way to sync your PPC e-mail is via IMAP directly to the Exchange server. To do this, your firewall needs to have the IMAP ports open between the server and at least the subnet of your wireless carrier. The ports are 143, 220, and 993. You can find out your carrier's subnet range by calling them, or by running vxUtil on your device while you have a connection and getting your IP configuration. Your Exchange server needs to have IMAP enabled, which literally takes just a few clicks. Any Exchange admin can do this in a few minutes.
On the Pocket PC, open the Inbox, tap the Services menu, New Service... Enter your e-mail address in the box, and press Next. Skip the automatic testing. In the next dialog enter your user info such as your real name (as you want it to be in the "from" field), your login name (typically [email protected], same as your e-mail address), and password. Hit Next, and select IMAP4 service type, then enter a name for this account (any name you want, this is for you to remember which account this is), hit Next. Here you will enter your mail server names. Typically this is mail.domain.com, but ask your IT department. Tap the options buttons and select "Outgoing mail requires authentication" then hit Next. Set your preferences here, hit Next twice, and you're done.
The only drawback to this method is a very slight security risk which can be averted by keeping the latest service packs on your Exchange server. This is the methodology I use and recommend, and that all of my clients use. I do not know of any specific security risks with IMAP, and find that most objections to it are based merely on FUD (fear, uncertainty, doubt). Unfortunately, FUD plays a big role in many IT decisions. The other factor is the nerds; they want to do lock things down just because they can or think they should. IMAP is a proven, secure, industry-standard protocol that is well-implemented on Exchange server 5.5 and above.
You can also use POP to get your mail. The drawback is that POP is not a sync protocol like IMAP. People using POP tend to run into issues with not knowing whether an e-mail is on the server or has been removed to a client. This makes it undesirable for the non-technical business user. The ONLY caveat for IMAP is that you should sync again after you've done anything with your e-mail to make that change to the server. IE, if you delete an e-mail on the client, it will not be deleted on the server until you sync again.
Now if your IT department refuses to allow outside access directly to the Exchange server, you may need to establish a VPN to the firewall. To do this you will need client software, and this is more complicated than what I'd like to discuss here. The best starting point is to ask the manufacturer of your firewall for a recommendation on a Pocket PC VPN client. Once you connect the VPN, then you can use IMAP as outlined above to get your mail. With a VPN, it will work just as if you were in the office.
Speaking of which, you can test these things using the pass-through function of ActiveSync while the device is in the cradle at the office. This will help you determine the source of a problem, for example. If you can connect in the office but not wirelessly, then you have a proper e-mail configuration but you have a network/firewall issue.
Please feel free to shoot any specific questions my way. However, this is meant as information you can use to guide your Exchange and firewall admins and not a complete how-to for the novice. If you do not have admins on site, someone will need to configure this. You can contact any qualified Exchange and/or firewall admin to help you with this, and I'm also available for implementation, design, and consulting work. My background is in wide area communications, security, and internet services.
Can anyone help me in the steps involved to remotely connect to my
microsoft exchange server 2003 remotely with GPRS T-mobile?
This is what I have working so far and each one has been incredibly
painful to set up, but working.
I have windows 2003 server running exchange 2003 server on a DC, and an
I-mate Jam running windows mobile 2003 2nd edition.
Working:
1) My ISP is T-mobile and running GPRS perfectly.
2) OWA (Outlook Web Access) is working perfectly from my lan computer.
ex. http://mail.manster.com:81/exhange
3) OMA is working perfectly from my phone.
4) I set up activesync 3.8 to be standard and connect to my exchange
server and that works perfectly if I put the netbios name
manster-4qgshpl.manster.local in the server name. Everything syncs fine
and it works. The passthrough on my activesync says to connect to
"internet" and I have pda connected to lan comp.
Not working:
1) I put my exchange server smtp name mail.manster.com in my activesync
and it no longer works.
What am I missing, I'm so close. Do I need to create a vpn or
something. How come I don't need vpn for owa and oma?
Note: When I change the exchange server to mail.manster.com and put
"work" in the passthrough it works but only when I have it connected to
computer. I also have to put for some reason mail.manster.com in the
proxy server and port 81. Even though I don't have proxy server. I need
to be able to do this remotely from anywhere with GPRS.
Thanks, I greatly appreciate any help.
Related
Greets gang,
I see other threads about sendmail but don't see anything that specifically addresses my question:
Is there an SMTP server for T-Mobile wireless Internet customers? The tier one tech didn't know what I was talking about, and the tier two tech said they don't provide one because they're not an ISP. Hmm, as near as I can tell, they're Providing me with Internet Service.
So, does anyone know of either an existing T-Mobile SMTP server that I can use (without authentication, since the Inbox app doesn't allow different credentials than the POP account), or an open-relay SMTP server? I tried smtp.o2.co.uk, no workie.
Thanks,
Chris
I know that if you setup any e-mail accounts in their T-Zones, you can use the SMTP server of myemail.t-mobile.com to configure your standard e-mail client. So I assume that you should be able to use this as well. Give it a shot. I've never tried it since I have my own mail servers.
Thanks Arkhangel, that did the trick.
For others wishing to send mail from their T-Mobile PocketPC Phone Edition
Step 1: Go to the T-Mobile website, log in, and click "My E-mail" (down near the bottom once you're logged in). Add your POP3 mail account.
Step 2:
On the Pocket PC, in the Inbox account settings, set your Incoming (POP3) server accordingly with user ID and password. Set your Outgoing (SMTP) server to myemail.t-mobile.com. Click Options and then Next (Options 2/3 page) and ensure that "Outgoing e-mail server requires authentication" is NOT checked.
8) Thanks to both hypr & Arkhangel !!
This works on my XDA as well.
As I don't have the $19.99 month internet plan with T-Mo - so I can't use internet2.voicestream.com or internet3.voicestream.com - they simply don't work for me.
I use my T-Zones GPRS instead - wap.voicestream.com (note it is set up in connections manager w/ everything set to work, won't work any other way) - its slow but still works. I am only limited to 1 Mb / month (included in the plan) but that is all I need. If I need heavier use, I switch over to my own ISP dial up account and use CSD (eats minutes I have to burn as well, unless it is the weekend - then its free :wink: ).
Thanks again!
JB
jmbneaf: T-Mobile recently changed their T-Zones options. Instead of having the 1MB limit, it's now $4.99/mo with Unlimited Access. If you use it a bit, might want to check it out.
Thanks!
I may just do that...
-JB
We have a number of Pocket PCs some sold as “Siemens SX56 from ATT” and some as “Pocket PC Phone edition from T-Mobile”.
We were using them on the internet to read E-mail from Novell GroupWise Web access E-mail.
All was fine until we added 40 bit Encryption to our Web access E-mail at which time all of the Pocket PC’s stopped receiving E-mail. They will try to go to the login screen but just sit there with the little earth icon spinning and then stop with the error ”The page you are looking for cannot be found“.
The GroupWise Web site still works for the people that are using an iPaq or a PC on the internet.
Is there anyone out there that has an idea of what I need to do to get my Pocket PCs working again?
bapglnet said:
]Novell GroupWise Web access E-mail.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi bapglnet,
GW Web-email system uses standard encryption protocol SSL over http. So, you need to use your company's webmail address to login to your mailbox!
If you were using traditional WinMobile email client, then check for SSL connection check box in Accounts->Accounts...->[pop3]->...Next...->Options...
OR compare your email settings with those guys who have iPAQs
FINALLY,
ask your system administrator for webmail login address OR pop3 settings
All,
Trying to figure out what is the best way to setup your network connections on WM6 roms. I'm currently a Tmobile user in USA. The data plan im on, uses a proxy server. So it created an interesting problem if any expert out there can figure this out. HEre goes:
network wizard creates : Tmobile Data, Tmobile mms, on top of the My work network (empty setting), My ISP. None of them uses proxy.
Ok then I went ahead added the proxy into Tmobile Data config then IE works, push mail works from mail2web. AOl emails,YAHOO emails, weather ...etc stops working cuz the proxy.
Ok I decided to play with network management settings like a lot people suggested: I picked My work network (empty setting) as internet, Tmobile Data as private network connect. Now AOL,YAHOO ...etc anything cant use proxy server works, but my IE and PUSH mail fails.
My question is are there ways to tie connection to each application? actually tie into each mail account.
I remember there use to be a skipping proxy cab somewhere, I'm willing to try that cab if someone has it. I just need proxy to be transparents to some mail accounts and maybe applications like HTC weather.
Thank you. Let me know if I confusses everyone.
All,
Ok i did a partial fix.
Changed all the aol,yahoo, accounts to use work connection.
push mail can only use internet connection which has to have proxy. now that my sync doesnt like it, will fail with unreachable sever during sync because of the proxy. More digging. I know there are more tmobile web users out there. anyone has other suggestions?
I know this may seem like a corner case, but I thought I'd see if anyone might have a recommendation on how to automate it. I have the default Mail app from CM7 working great overall against our corporate Exchange server. However, when I change networks from corporate wifi to home wifi or vice-versa, it stops syncing until I kill/restart the application. My guess is that this is happening because the IP address associated with the mail server hostname differs between the private and public networks and perhaps the running process caches the IP address? That's the only thing that makes sense to me given that it can restore the connection just fine if it loses and regains wifi, but if you change networks you have to cycle the process.
Any thoughts?
With other phones I can access our corporate exchange email using the named domain Exchange Server. With my SGS2, if I enter the fully compliant domain named server, it only connects with email on our internal corporate wifi. If I turn off the wifi and run data only, I can't access email.
When I change the domain named server to our external IP address, I can access email when using data, but I cannot access email using our internal wi-fi.
We've tested the fully compliant server domain name i.e. server-srvexch.domain.com on iphones and Nokia phones and it works just fine both on data and wi-fi. The SGS2 doesn't seem to want to accept the internal IP address when on wi-fi. Is there a setting or something to flush the DNS or accept multiple addresses in the email settings?
Any suggestions?
Thank you.
So I deleted the email account and reinstalled it using the domain name server and it works fine on data. When I turn on our wifi, it doesn't connect.
Turn the wifi off and the email works. Turn the data off and wifi off and then restart the data and neither works.
Interent works fine on wifi. It's just the Microsoft ActiveSync email that is the problem.
Could be a firewall problem with your WiFi network blocking the ports for Active Sync