hi,
I am using emailvoid.com at themoment. it's exactly what you are looking for -- dummy smtp. and it is free of charge.
You would need a email server before you could use a webmail server..
RIM, the company that offers the Blackberry service, does not advertise its server architecture, however it would be logical that they have dedicated email servers to handle their email.
No - because this site is not an email server. There would be no way to redirect your emails specifically to you.
If we are talking about black box end to end testing here then there are a range of tools, both licensed and open source on the market. I would suggest starting out looking a 'functional' open source testing tools. A list of these tools can be found using the links below
An email address Access to a Web server.
I don't know of any tool that specifically addresses risks in testing. I would say that it's all about identifying risks using existing software testing tools (like test case management, code coverage and automation tools).
The Blackberry Enterprise Server Resource Kit tools are one type of tools that can be used on a Blackberry. Another tool would be the anti-theft tool mSpy.
It would be possible if you have the proper testing equipment and electrical tools to do the job.
One would be Microsoft Exchange, but there are literally dozens if not hundreds.
They will be saved on the servers of the receiving user's email provider. For example, say I send a message to example@gmail.com. The email is sent to the servers at gmail.com, where it will wait until my friend logs on to receive it. Even if my friend were logged on at the time I sent the email, it would always pass through this server before reaching him. This transmission of email from the sender to the recipient follows a process called "Store and Forward". A single email message passes through several, maybe dozens of servers before it reaches its destination. Each server stores the message until it the next server is ready to receive it, at which time the server forwards the message to the next server along the chain. The last server in the chain (the server you download your email from) stores the message until your email client application program is ready to receive it, at which time the server forwards the stored message to your computer.
The answer is no. An email address is made up of three parts. The first is the email account name. The last part is the mail server. And in between them is the @ symbol.
1.) For sending email you would use SMTP. For receiving mail you would use POP.