Folks,
Gary mentioned in his last message that he had trouble sending e-mail due to anti-spam settings. Indeed, I have a few things in place to reduce spam on this mailing list which I hope you can generally appreciate.
One of the mechanisms employed is something called SPF (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sender_Policy_Framework) as specified in RFC 4408. As noted in the RFC, it is experimental and not strongly endorsed by the IETF for one reason (as far as I can tell): you cannot forward mail from one account to another if SPF is used on the receiving server, as it will assume the message is in violation of the SPF rules. Even so, I've observed that industry adoption for SPF is significant.
I thought I would bring this to your attention. If you get SPF rejection messages when sending e-mail to this server, then it means that you are transmitting e-mail from an IP address that is not authorized by your domain owner. Hopefully, this is not an issue for folks, but it might be if you send mail through a server which you do not normally send mail through.
I can disable SPF checking if it presents unavoidable problems for anybody. I would prefer to not do that, because the extensive testing I have done shows that it reduces my own personal spam by 28%. That's substantial considering the quantity of the fine quality product and service offerings I get each day ;-)
Paul