This is a multi-part message in MIME format. --------------F806AC12485AD2D680BA5F17 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit > David Demland wrote: > > I got Cox@home and I signed up for plug again > from home. This way I can get mail both at work > and at home. But every time I have posted from > home the mail never makes it to the mail list > here. I got the signup e-mail from the list, but > I get nothing else. Any ideas? David; What software are you running on your home system? What sort of error are you getting when attempting to post to the list? There have been some problems using Netscape 4.6 - 4.72 with Linux. The problem shows up as a error in the Mailman program which causes the posted message to hang up in the Mailman program and fail to post to the list. I am attaching a README.NETSCAPE file from the Mailman folks which might help. Art Wagner --------------F806AC12485AD2D680BA5F17 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii; name="README.NETSCAPE" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Content-Disposition: inline; filename="README.NETSCAPE" Mailman - The GNU Mailing List Management System Copyright (C) 1998,1999,2000 by the Free Software Foundation, Inc. 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA Some of your users may experience problems sending mail to a members-only list, if they are using Netscape Communicator as their MUA. Communicator 4.6 on Linux has been observed to insert bogus unqualified Sender: headers -- i.e. Sender: headers with only the username part of the email address. Other version of Netscape may also have the same bug. Members-only lists use Sender: as the first field to authenticate against, so if Sender: exists in the email message, but it is unqualified, it will never match a mailing list member's address, and their post will always be held for approval. In the future, Mailman will improve its algorithm for finding a matching address, but in the meantime, M. A. Lemburg provides the following advice. You can send this snippet to any user whose posts are being held for seemingly no reason. Edit the two .js files in your .netscape directory (liprefs.js and preferences.js) to include the function call: user_pref("mail.suppress_sender_header", true); BTW, the binary includes a comment which says that this is only necessary on Unix. Since Communicator regenerates this file upon exit, the change must be done when Communicator is not currently running. With the next start, it will stop adding the Sender: header and things start to work like a charm again. The reason things start to work again, is that Mailman falls back to authenticating the From: header if the Sender: header is missing. Local Variables: mode: indented-text indent-tabs-mode: nil End: --------------F806AC12485AD2D680BA5F17--