S steve0617 Dec 13, 2007 #2 Ignoring the inevitable posts to follow that will ask you WHY? You will need an Exchange server and Outlook (full, not Express) as your server/client. The instant the Exchange server receives it, a connected Outlook will show the message. No Send/Receive necessary. There are lots of web hosting companies online that will provide you such a service. Try here: http://order.1and1.com/xml/order/Ma...4B8D71859402E8.TC61b?__frame=_top&__lf=Static But simply changing email clients using your existing service provider won't do it since I'm guessing you use POP mail. Hell, even IMAP still requires a Send/Receive.
Ignoring the inevitable posts to follow that will ask you WHY? You will need an Exchange server and Outlook (full, not Express) as your server/client. The instant the Exchange server receives it, a connected Outlook will show the message. No Send/Receive necessary. There are lots of web hosting companies online that will provide you such a service. Try here: http://order.1and1.com/xml/order/Ma...4B8D71859402E8.TC61b?__frame=_top&__lf=Static But simply changing email clients using your existing service provider won't do it since I'm guessing you use POP mail. Hell, even IMAP still requires a Send/Receive.
D Daal Dec 13, 2007 #3 all the software needs to do is to the 1minute procedure every 5 secs or so. i dont think this is a server issue
all the software needs to do is to the 1minute procedure every 5 secs or so. i dont think this is a server issue
S steve0617 Dec 13, 2007 #4 Quote from Daal: all the software needs to do is to the 1minute procedure every 5 secs or so. i dont think this is a server issue More... Your post said "updates every second." That means Active Sync or an Exchange server. Now you say every 5 seconds. Which is it?
Quote from Daal: all the software needs to do is to the 1minute procedure every 5 secs or so. i dont think this is a server issue More... Your post said "updates every second." That means Active Sync or an Exchange server. Now you say every 5 seconds. Which is it?
R Reaver Dec 13, 2007 #6 Quote from Daal: The minimum I could find was 1min More... That girl you met at the bar last night, don't sweat it man. Play it cool. You don't want to respond to her emails immediately anyway...make her chase you man. You got this my man.
Quote from Daal: The minimum I could find was 1min More... That girl you met at the bar last night, don't sweat it man. Play it cool. You don't want to respond to her emails immediately anyway...make her chase you man. You got this my man.
M mr19 Dec 13, 2007 #8 another alternative is to look for a mail provider and client that supports the IMAP IDLE command. I believe the free aol email accounts support IMAP IDLE on the server side and you can keep using Outlook Express on the client side.
another alternative is to look for a mail provider and client that supports the IMAP IDLE command. I believe the free aol email accounts support IMAP IDLE on the server side and you can keep using Outlook Express on the client side.