E-mail Settings Help

Setup A New Account - Macintosh - Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.7

Open Mozilla Thunderbird. If this is the first time you have opened Thunderbird, the 'Import Settings and Mail Folders From' dialog box will pop up. Make sure it has a dot in 'Don't import anything' and click 'Next'.

This will bring you to the 'New Account Setup' wizard.

Make sure the dot is on 'Email account' and click 'Next'.

Identity

This is where you can choose what name will be displayed in the FROM area when you send an email. A good idea is to use your real name or business name (if this is a generic mailbox).

'Your Name':
Replace with: Your Name

This is also where you type in your email address.

'Email Address':
Replace with: your_email@your_website_address.com

Click 'Next'.

Server Information

Make sure you have 'POP' selected for the type of the incoming server.

'Incoming Server':
Replace with: mail.your_website_address.com

'Outgoing Server':
Replace with: mail.your_website_address.com

Click 'Next'.

User Names

'Incoming User Name':
Replace with: your_email.your_website_address.com

Click 'Next'.

Account Name

This is a reference name for your email account only inside of Thunderbird.

  • 'Account Name':
    Replace with: your_email@your_website_address.com

Congratulations!

After reviewing the settings on this screen, click 'Finish' and it will open up Mozilla Thunderbird fully and show you your 'Inbox', automatically doing a Send/Receive for email.

You should be able to send and receive email.


CANNOT SEND EMAIL?

If you can receive email however you cannot send email and the settings are exactly as shown above, change your outgoing mail (SMTP) port from the default of 25 to 1025.

To do this:

Click on the 'Tools' menu > 'Account Settings' > 'Outgoing Server (SMTP)' sub-category on the left.

Change the 'Port' from 25 to 1025.

Background Reasoning:

In order to combat spam, some Internet Service Providers (ISPs) block traffic to external servers on port 25 so that customers using that ISP can only use the ISP's mail server. If that customer is going to spam, the idea is that they must use the ISP's mail server to spam and therefore be caught very quickly, and handled accordingly. Realizing that many ISP's mail servers have a more restrictive options (ie. not being able to send to more than 100 people at a time) as they are usually residential mail servers, we have opened an alternative port to allow you to send mail using our mail servers, one that the ISPs do not block. That port is SMTP port 1025.

© 2008