On Sun, Jun 28, 2009 at 5:22 PM, Frank Cox<theatre@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Sun, 28 Jun 2009 17:09:03 -0500 > Steven P. Ulrick wrote: > >> 4. Also, I know for a fact that I do NOT have a static IP address. This has >> not as of yet caused any know problems (though this issue may be the first...) > > The purpose of a domain name is to associate the name with an IP address. Understood. > If you don't have a static IP address, then your IP address will change at > intervals. Also understood, with one qualification: understanding that Comcast has no obligation to not change my IP address, the fact is that they HAVEN'T changed it for quite a long time. Again, that does not mean that they won't change it while I'm typing this email, it's just to say that they HAVEN'T changed it for a very long time. > If your IP address changes then your domain name will be pointing to an > incorrect IP address and any email sent to your domain name will not arrive at > your mailserver. Again understood. But that has not been the case with my situation, since in fact my IP has not changed. So if I can assume that if my IP address doesn't change that my mail will be delivered to me successfully, then that would account for the fact that up until VERY recently this admittedly fragile setup has been working like a charm. No guarantees that it would continue to work of course, just stating that it HAS worked for a very long time. Slightly off of the thoughts stated above, but I have a free DNS account with dnsexit.com. So in rare situations where my IP address does change I just change my IP address at dnsexit.com and everything is back to normal. Anyway, if you have any more thoughts based on my above reply, I would love to hear them. Thank You, Steven P. Ulrick -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines