Hi to all My first day reading msgs and first post. I find Symantec / Norton's just as hard to deal with. You send your money, take whatever they send you, and if it works, wonderful, they get credit. If you have problems, tough, get away from me, don't bother me, unless you are willing to pay another $30 or so. Even if you pay the fee, you may or may not get any real help. The answer from them is "go down to the corner, hang around the news groups and see if you can find anyone who has figured out a work around. Can some one tell me if Norton AntiVirus checks incoming email in Juno? What about outgoing? What about McAfee? Thanks a ton. Chas ============================================== On Mon, 24 Feb 2003 04:19:53 -0700 (MST) Robin Roe <roro@xxxxxxxxxxxx> writes: > > carolynstoffel@xxxxxxxx wrote: > > >I've written a couple of times and now seem to have a - I hope - > >usable address at Juno: > > > >Return-path: <null@xxxxxxxx> > > LOL.. Carolyn, I can tell you just by looking at it that that > address leads to nothing but the electronic circular file. > > A little background: In both DOS and Unix (including Linux), there > is a special software "device" called "Null". This pseudo-device > accepts data and does nothing, outputs nothing. Just think of it as > your friendly electronic Roach Motel ("Data checks in but they don't > check out"), or as a black hole for data. > > So by the looks of it, that email address is set up to route email > sent to it right past the ol' event horizon. And, you have to admit > that it does fit right in with Juno's standard modus operandi of > being damned hard to contact. :-/ > > > ==ROBIN== > ________________________________________________________________ Sign Up for Juno Platinum Internet Access Today Only $9.95 per month! Visit www.juno.com To unsubscribe, send a message to ecartis@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with "unsubscribe juno_accmail" in the body or subject. OR visit //freelists.org ~*~