CONTACT INFORMATION
For a
map or
directions to our
office, click here.
For our office hours and the days when we are
closed, click here.
GOODMAN LAW FIRM
Send all MAIL to:
P.O. Box 2489
Prescott, Arizona 86302-2489
Delivery/office address:
1575 Plaza West Drive
Prescott, AZ 86303
Telecommunications:
Phone: 928/445-3230
Fax: 928/xxx-xxxx (permission required)
Read the e-mail &
snailmail
warning before sending any email or snailmail to us.

Email problems:
Web.com
(formerly Interland.com), our Web host and e-mail provider, uses a spam
filter on our incoming e-mails. If your e-mail is rejected, look for the
following message:
"The server sending your mail [number] does not have a reverse DNS
entry. Connection Rejected. Please contact your Dial-Up/DSL/Network ISP
Provider."
A
"reverse DNS entry" tells the Internet where your email is coming from;
without it, you are considered a potential spammer. If you get this
message, you need to contact your technical support to fix the problem,
otherwise you will notice your e-mails being rejected by more and more
servers in the future. Reverse DNS turns an IP address into a
hostname -- for example, it might turn 192.0.2.25 into host.example.com.
Many
e-mail servers on the Internet are configured to reject incoming e-mails
from any IP address which does not have reverse DNS. Reverse lookup
requirements are becoming mandatory. Many domains will refuse mail unless
there is a corresponding PTR record for the MX record of the domain. The
PTR (pointer) record maps an IP address to a hostname and fully qualified
domain name. A special PTR-record type is used to store reverse DNS
entries. The name of a PTR-record is the IP address with the segments
reversed + ".in-addr.arpa". For example the reverse DNS entry for IP
1.2.3.4 would be stored as a PTR-record for "4.3.2.1.in-addr.arpa".
For more information, see:
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/prodtechnol/windowsserver2003/library/ServerHelp/edf68cca-86f1-4b89-8e44-79f768963e95.mspx
http://www.simpledns.com/help/index.html?df_reverse.htm
http://www.dnsstuff.com/info/revdns.htm |