On Saturday 30 November 2019 10:56:42 Michael wrote:
On Saturday 30 November 2019 08:25:12 am William
Morder via trinity-users
wrote:
If you host your own email, then you can control
everything yourself. Of
course, you must have the skills to be able to set up your own server, as
well as having to pay for bandwidth, etc. However, it only costs about
$500 US for the server, and then about another $100 US per year for
subscription. (Note that I saved the links some months ago, and haven't
read these pages since then, so my memory may be faulty.)
It seems to me, however, that a group of people could set up their own
email service, and divide the costs and responsibilities.
Whoa, whoa, whoa!
If I read that right you’re saying an Email server is $500+ per year? That
is so not true!
Conventionally you need:
- Domain name ($9/year) [1]
- A cheap shared host ($20/year) [2]
- A free web hosting control panel ($0/year) [3] *
- Security & Firewall software ($0/year) [4]
Total ~$30/year
* You’ll need this with a VPS or better, with a shared host you probably
won’t.
If you don’t want to manage a server, the unconventional route is to use
Email Hosting at your domain registrar.
- Domain name ($9/year) [1]
- Email Hosting ($24/year) [5]
Total ~$35/year
# # #
Generally the difference is with conventional you get unlimited email
addresses of your domain name and it can be setup to SSH tunnel between you
and your server. Email Hosting at your domain registrar tends to limit the
number of email addresses you can use and doesn’t always have a secure
connection (Porkbun seems to, but I’ve never used it).
A secure connection is desired, but in no way guarantees your mail isn’t
sent plain text between other hops.
# # #
I’m a Porkbun customer, so if you decide to use them, shoot me a private
email and I’ll dig through their affiliate junk and send you a code.
If anyone decides to go the conventional route, I do this for a living,
shoot me an email if you have any questions or need setup help.
Best All,
Michael
http://inet-design.com/
[1]
https://porkbun.com/products/domains#searchResultsTldLetter_c
[2]
https://www.webhostingtalk.com/forumdisplay.php?f=4
[3]
https://www.accuwebhosting.com/blog/top-5-free-web-hosting-control-panels-t
o-manage-vps-dedicated-servers/
https://www.znetlive.com/blog/comparison-of-top-11-open-source-hosting-pane
ls/
[4]
https://www.configserver.com/cp/csf.html
[5]
https://porkbun.com/products/email
NO NO NO
$500 to buy the server itself (which looks about the size of a shoebox). If I
remember the info on the web pages, they said one needed a subscription,
which was about $100 a year, but that seemed too much to me. Good to know.
I don't know if one must get a "subscription" through one certain company
(i.e., connected to the makers of the server itself), or if others can be
used, such as you recommend.
Damn it, now I'm gonna have to go back and read these things again!
:-/
In any case, I am more interested in the principle of the matter, which is
self-hosting of one's own email; or, what I believe more manageable, for a
small group to create and manage their own. If it gets too big, then you have
the same problems as with Gmail, etc.; if too small, then you are
overburdened with technical stuff, and it's probably too much for a single
person.
Bill
P.S. This might have got sent twice, due to problems with my own email.
email
doctor_contendo(a)zoho.com
jabber/xmpp
dr_mojo_contendo(a)hot-chilli.net