On Sun, 2007-02-25 at 15:22 -0500, Evan Panagiotopoulos wrote:
This is what I got from: telnet mail.poughkeepsieschools.org 80 Trying 64.72.66.117... Connected to mail.poughkeepsieschools.org (64.72.66.117). Escape character is '^]'. get index.php
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN">
<html><head> <title>400 Bad Request</title> </head><body> <h1>Bad Request</h1> <p>Your browser sent a request that this server could not understand.<br /> </p> </body></html> Connection closed by foreign host.
If you'd tried "GET" instead of "get" you might have got something else instead of a 400 error:
[tim@gonzales ~]$ telnet mail.poughkeepsieschools.org 80 Trying 64.72.66.117... Connected to mail.poughkeepsieschools.org (64.72.66.117). Escape character is '^]'. GET / <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN"> <html><head> <title>302 Found</title> </head><body> <h1>Found</h1> <p>The document has moved <a href="https://mail.poughkeepsieschools.org/">here</a>.</p> </body></html> Connection closed by foreign host.
I got a 302 (okay, but...) response. In a nutshell, that give you a response that tells you to use the address they provide back (the one in the HTTP headers, and they've provided the same details in the HTML, as well), instead of the one that you tried to use.
The address that you're redirected to use worked for me.