Did you try entering [log in to unmask] in the email field (vs.
ejepsen) ?
It looks like that's the address that list.uvm.edu has you registered
with.
-Rob
On Aug 29, 2005, at 9:02 AM, Eric M. Jepsen wrote:
> How do i get this to work?
> thanks, eric
>
> Quoting "UVM LISTSERV Server (14.4)" <[log in to unmask]>:
>
>
>> Mon, 29 Aug 2005 08:54:42
>>
>> No entry for your [log in to unmask] address could be found in the
>> BLOGGING
>> list at LIST.UVM.EDU. Here are a number of possible reasons why
>> you might
>> still be getting mail from the list:
>>
>> 1. You could be subscribed under a different, but equivalent
>> address. For
>> instance, if your e-mail address as it appears in the 'From:'
>> line of
>> messages coming from you has the misfortune of depending on the
>> distance
>> between your workstation and the terminal room door, you were
>> probably
>> subscribed from a different address and, while your mail
>> system knows
>> that the two addresses are equivalent, LISTSERV has no way to
>> know that.
>> In this case the only thing you can do, beyond contacting the list
>> owner,
>> is to send a "REVIEW BLOGGING" command to find out under what
>> address you
>> are subscribed, and try to duplicate it with the help of
>> your user
>> support people.
>>
>> 2. If you are a BITNET user, you might be subscribed under your
>> Internet
>> address and sending this command via BITNET, or vice versa. Most
>> BITNET
>> sites have registered their Internet addresses in the
>> BITNET nodes
>> database, BITEARN NODES (the "tag" containing this information is
>> called
>> ':internet' - if you do not understand any of this, just bring a
>> copy of
>> this message to your user support people). Unfortunately, some
>> sites have
>> still not done that, and in such cases LISTSERV has no way to
>> determine
>> that, for instance, BITNET node XYZCOL1 is the same as
>> Internet host
>> VM3.XYZ.EDU. If you suspect this might be your problem, try
>> resending
>> your request via both interactive message (SEND under VMS, TELL
>> under VM)
>> and e-mail.
>>
>> 3. You might be subscribed under an equivalent yet different
>> address -
>> for instance, one with explicit gatewaying, or an X.400
>> address with
>> different ordering of the various components, etc. You could
>> send a
>> "REVIEW BLOGGING" command and inspect the list membership to
>> find out
>> whether this is the case, and ask the list owners to remove that
>> address
>> from the list.
>>
>> 4. You could be subscribed to the list under another account,
>> from which
>> mail is being automatically forwarded to your [log in to unmask]
>> account. In
>> that case you should be able to leave the list by resending the
>> signoff
>> request from the account in question.
>>
>> 5. You could be subscribed to the list indirectly, via a
>> "redistribution"
>> list. That is, one of the subscribers to the LISTSERV list is in
>> fact a
>> mailing list, to which you are yourself subscribed (note
>> that this
>> "sub-list" is not necessarily managed by LISTSERV and, in
>> fact, such
>> lists are often manually maintained, in which case the only way
>> to leave
>> the list is to contact the person who maintains it). Since you
>> are not
>> directly subscribed to BLOGGING, the only way for you to stop
>> getting the
>> postings is to contact the administrators of this sub-list and
>> ask them
>> to sign you off.
>>
>> You should be able to contact the list owners by simply replying
>> to this
>> message (if you do not know how to reply to a message in your
>> mailbox,
>> you can send a new message to [log in to unmask]
>> instead).
>>
>>
>
>
>
> --
> Eric M. Jepsen
> Political Science
> University of Vermont
> 539 Old Mill
> 94 University Place
> Burlington, VT 05405-0114
> Phone: (802) 656-4054
> Fax: (802) 656-0758
> [log in to unmask]
>
--
Rob Maurizi
Web Developer / Flash Developer
Center for Teaching & Learning
University of Vermont
802-656-0317 // [log in to unmask]
http://rmaurizi.blog.uvm.edu/
"Trying to make everyone happy makes no one happy"
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