Hi, y'all. I thought I'd run this up the flagpole here to see what sorts of ideas y'all might have. I've got a client with a domain of, say, 'mydomain.com'. They have about 1000 users. There is a 3rd party company (we'll call them 'reminders.com' for discussion sake) the client wants to work with that will periodically send notices to various client users notifying them of the occurrance of certain events. eg., they'll send a notice to a user Fred Flintstone (FredF@mydomain.com) telling him that his library book needs to be returned. To accomplish this, they want the email addresses of all the users. For a variety of reasons, I want these notices to get routed into a single client database instead of sent out as hundreds of untraceable emails each month. For one thing, if a user leaves (like an employee), somebody needs to get the notices in their place, which isn't necessarily possible if a regular email address is used (either the user's personal email or their email address at the company). The 3rd party company has been doing this sort of thing for years, and their clients (hundreds, with over 100k total users) don't seem to find any problem with emails getting bounced, managing the coming and going of users and keeping the 3rd party firm updated on all this stuff. So they're not inclined to add a bit of code to call an http POST function with this info rather than have their software call sendmail. What I'm thinking of is giving the 3rd party a list of names and user-ids unrelated to their email addresses, per se. Then have them send everything to an address like one of these: (1) .reminders@mydomain.com (2) reminders.@mydomain.com (3) @reminders.mydomain.com There would be something watching for emails conforming to one of these patterns. When it sees one, it would parse the email and post it to a MySQL database record keyed on with the body of the message and other relevant data posted to other fields in the record. It might be a good idea to save the email in another queue indicating it had been processed. What I'm wondering is if there's any particular difference between handling any of these forms. I'm not too keen on #3 as it implies other things in other contexts (eg., reminders.mydomain.com ==> www.mydomain.com/reminders/). Also, what's the "preferred" method you would use to implement something like this? (I'm using Red Hat 7.1 and qmail in this particular instance, in case it matters.) Thanks -David Schwartz