Hola buenas, compre un dominio y un webhosting en 1-2-3-reg.co.uk
Resulta que cuando entro a mi correo de
[email protected]
Puedo enviar mail a hotmail, gmail, etc, pero cuando intento responder desde hotmail, o gmail , me dicen que esa cuenta no existe...vamos que no recibo ningun correo ,
esta es la configuracion:
Código HTML:
Ver originalDomain is not on our nameservers.
Before you may modify your domain DNS settings using this panel, your domain nameservers must be set to "ns.123-reg.co.uk" and "ns2.123-reg.co.uk" respectively.
A, CNAME and TXT records
Name Type Content Delete
ns01.000webhost.com
ns02.000webhost.com
Add new entry
MX Records
Name Priority Delete
mx0.123-reg.co.uk. 10
mx1.123-reg.co.uk. 20
Add New MX
Warning - If you have an @ record set to a CNAME, all other @ records (including MX) will be ignored and set to the same domain to which it points.
Please note: If your MX records no longer point to valid 123-reg MX servers, any mail forwarding rules for the domain will also be removed.
Reset DNS to defaults
DNS
This tool allows you to modify the zone file that holds the DNS information for your domain name. It will only work if your nameservers are pointing to ns.123-reg.co.uk and ns2.123-reg.co.uk if you have changed the nameservers away, the above will have no effect.
Be very careful when altering things like this, if you were to remove the 'www' record for instance, your web forwarding (if set up) would fail.
'A' records - A records are a pointer linking a name to an IP (Internet Protocol) address.
'CNAME' records - 'CNAME' (canonical name) records are a pointer to another name already in DNS. A CNAME is always relative to the current domain unless it ends with a full stop (.), then it is known as "fully qualified".
This is NOT web forwarding. http://www.some-url.tld/ is not a valid CNAME.
'MX' records - These control where your email goes. Be very careful with these, if you get this wrong you will lose email. You can't point these at just any server, you have to have agreed this with the ISP that controls them. The 'priority' field in the MX records governs the order in which mail servers are tried in case one is unavailable. The lower the number, the higher the priority. An MX with a priority of '10' would be tried before one of '20'. The highest priority one must be the one that ultimately accepts the mail, not one that will relay it on elsewhere.
These follow the same rules as CNAMEs regarding full qualification, and must end with a full stop if the 'domain' part is present, (e.g. mail.domain.com.).
Cual es el problema, Supongo que es porque la pagina la tengo alojada en 000webhost...pero no se configurar lo del correo una saludo.