Linux Desktop Email Key to Success 478
littlepill writes "It looks as though email clients are vital for Linux to succeed in the desktop battle. ZDNet says, "the lack of a powerful email application could hinder the adoption of Linux on the desktop". So, even though Novell's Evolution is one viable and valid product, it seems that there is a clear "message to application vendors to focus on developing a quality email application for the Linux desktop"." I'm unconvinced- I think webmail will soon be replacing client side readers for all but power users.
From the article (Score:3, Funny)
Soooo, it's not so much that there's any hindering going on. And like the Magic 8 Ball, Ask Again Later.
E-mail or more? (Score:5, Insightful)
Do they really mean just e-mail, or do they mean a replacement for Outlook? There are many decent e-mail clients on many platforms, but IME it's the lack of things like calendars and Exchange connectivity that get in the way at the office, and cause things like Thunderbird to be rejected even though there's a Windows version.
Re:E-mail or more? (Score:5, Insightful)
Full replacement for outlook, including contact sharing, one central server where everything is stored on, calendar and appointment scheduling and so on. Once they have that, businesses will start adopting it. Assuming it is as usable (for users and administrators) as the current MS Outlook system is.
Re:E-mail or more? (Score:4, Interesting)
I agree with you about the distinction between email and groupware. But may I add that I wouldn't exactly call Evolution or Thunderbird "powerful".
If you really want something for the powerusers, I'm thinking something more along the lines of Sylpheed Claws [sylpheed.org]. It has been ported to Windows, too.
Re:E-mail or more? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:E-mail or more? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:E-mail or more? (Score:3, Insightful)
Your boss is an idiot. He's paid money for Outlook and Exchange licences and isn't even using the single feature that makes Outlook a half-way worthwhile piece of software (because dog knows, it sucks arse compared to every single email client I've ever used; that's not really its fault though, it's not email client, it's a groupware/calendaring app with email thrown i
That can't be it (Score:5, Funny)
parent isn't flamebait (Score:2)
And I think it's hilarious.
Re:That can't be it (Score:3, Insightful)
Thuderbird Wins...Just Fix The Calendar! (Score:5, Insightful)
Here's my idea: Ditch flippin Chatzilla. Put a lot of effort towards the calendar.
The Calendar is one of the big reasons (that I have found) that people stick with Microsoft Outlook.
It doesn't even have to be the whiz-bang calendar like Outlook has, but it'd be nice if it would actually work worth a crap.
Re:Thuderbird Wins...Just Fix The Calendar! (Score:3, Interesting)
It's not just the calendar. Can you maintain a shared contact list or multiple lists on a server using Thunderbird? Before someone mentions an LDAP directory keep in mind that you can't modify those LDAP contacts from within Thunderbird itself. Unless I'm missing some hidden feature.
Re:Thuderbird Wins...Just Fix The Calendar! (Score:4, Informative)
Even when Evolution is working fine, it's dog-slow against Exchange, contacts are weak, public folder support is weak (if one creates a task folder or calendar folder in public folder, it's not recognized as such), and, well. . . it's the best option one has in Linux for Exchange interoperability, with the possible exception of wine/M$ Office.
With that said, if only Novell would fix Evolution and shove an update to the broken packages (Evolution, the connector, and libsoup) I'll be happy, even with the slow performance and poor public folder support.
Re:Thuderbird Wins...Just Fix The Calendar! (Score:3, Interesting)
If Novell uses anything other than the OWA interface to access Exchange, you're starting to tread on shaky licensing ground where Microsoft will demand that you purchase CALs for machines connecting to the Exchange server.
Bad title (Score:2)
The key to Linux not failing is email.
Without it, it will fail. Not failing != success.
I do agree in thinking webmail is the future.
An unpopular opinion (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:An unpopular opinion (Score:2, Insightful)
How do I set up a meeting, viewing everyone's schedules at a glance, reserving an available room and projector, with mutt?
Re:An unpopular opinion (Score:5, Insightful)
What the hell do any of those things have to do with email?!
I guess that's the one nice thing about working for a UNIX company. Or corporate calendar is a calendar app. Our corporate email is an email app. Our corporate browser is a browser app. Not really any need to combine them all, increasing the concurrent footprint and complexity posing additional stability risks.
Re:An unpopular opinion (Score:4, Funny)
The fact that the ZDNet guys are to journalism what China is to freedom, and couldn't understand the difference between an Email client (Thunderbird, Mutt, Pine, Outlook Express) and a Groupware application/client (Outlook) to save their lives.
Re:An unpopular opinion (Score:2, Funny)
To: Seumas
Subj: Meeting tomorrow at 5?
Are you free tomorrow at 5?
Re:An unpopular opinion (Score:3, Informative)
Seriously - if I worked for a company whos IT department might try and force Exchagne on me - I'd quit. Period. Fortunately, we don't run MS operating systems or applications of any kind and actually aren't allowed to outside of certa
Re:An unpopular opinion (Score:5, Insightful)
That kind of bullshit doesn't fly in a corporate environment. Perhaps you've never worked in a corporation that uses groupware effectively.
And "mutt" being better than Outlook? What are you smoking! 90% of the people in a corporate environment can barely use Outlook - there is no way that you are ever going to get them to use mutt.
How about things like HTML email, shared calendaring, or any of the other things that you can do with Evolution / Outlook?
Before you go pissing all over the IS departments of major corporations, you should at least have the courtesy to think why Exchange/Outlook might be so popular:
- Active Directory integration
- Single server / desktop program for calendaring, email, contacts, etc.
- Distribution lists, polls, meeting requests and other features that are simple enough for the typical office user to use
- Integrated server solution (don't need different programs for IMAP, SMTP, webmail, etc.)
- Excellent webmail experience using AJAX
- Contact / Calendar / Task / Mail integration with PocketPC, Palm, and BlackBerry
After spending multiple hours mucking with different (poorly documented) configuration formats, multiple different daemons, mucking with the DB - it's really clear that Linux just isn't there. Exchange is easier to install, easier to configure, and easier to manage.
Scalix (Score:2, Informative)
Re:An unpopular opinion (Score:2, Insightful)
I have and I am. Worked in a few of them for long periods of time. Sure, being ignorant in such an environment may be the status quo, but that doesn't make it a good goal or example to set. The other day I about smacked an executive because of the attitudes they had towards their password. It is that kind of attitude that makes it so easy to hack corporate networks nowadays.
If we continue to make applications that appeal to stu
Re:An unpopular opinion (Score:2)
It's a major piece of the Linux puzzle still missing. We need an Exchange/Outlook set of apps. If you can produce a unified groupware package that functions well and is reasonably easy to administrate, then I guarantee you, businesses will really perk up and take notice. Like it or not,
Re:An unpopular opinion (Score:3, Insightful)
"Intelligent people" are not the majority of internet users, or even email users. The majority of the market just wants the application to look pretty and work. They don't want to configure anything - moving the mouse to the start button is enough of a challenge thanks. They don't want to have to remember keys, etc etc. And to be perfectly honest, they shouldn't have to. It should "just work" (TM). Until the linux community understands this, it will nev
thunderbird? (Score:5, Informative)
I second the webmail thing. Before I quit my last windows-dominated job (to try my hand at this [rubyonrails.com] full-time), it was common for me to use the IE-based Outlook Web Access client since Outlook itself was often buggier.
Re:thunderbird? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:thunderbird? (Score:3, Insightful)
Whether or not you want to admit it, Microsoft has a great offering where groupware is concerned.
Re:thunderbird? (Score:2)
Not really, the issue here is that the hordes of mindless ZDNet goons can't tell the difference between an Email app (Mozilla Thunderbir) and a Groupware suite (Outlook).
To these failures of the journalism world, if you can get emails through it it's an email client.
So the headline should really state "ZDNET Fails To Grasp That A Groupware Application Is Not An Email Client"
Mutt works just great for me (Score:2)
In fact, there's not much I need a Windows machine for.
Mutt works far better than any email program I have used on Windows -- including Outlook, Eudora, and Thunderbird.
FireFox is all I need for web browsing.
GAIM is all I need for IMing.
But, I haven't found a replacement for Agent for USENET access. Everything I've used on other platforms is inferior.
webmail is only a convenience (Score:3, Interesting)
(No, it isn't the perfect solution. But I trust my system more than I trust my ISP.)
Re:webmail is only a convenience (Score:2)
Who doesn't like Thunderbird?? (Score:2)
What are the downsides?
Webmail for everyone but power users? Nah. (Score:5, Insightful)
Why? Webmail is slow at times and your Internet connection could be unavailable or only available at intervals. GMail, while great and all, isn't something I'm comfortable with even though I have 100s of labels and filters to make it readable. It's extremely slow on older CPUs and just b/c Google thinks that you don't need the "Folder concept" doesn't mean I don't want that.
With Webmail I can't get my e-mail to my machine and HOLD IT. I like the feeling that my e-mail is stored on *my* machine. I choose to archive my e-mail at GMail but it's not something I *must* have. In fact, depending on their future choices, I may remove all that e-mail and go back to just having it archived on WORM media.
Re:Webmail for everyone but power users? Nah. (Score:2)
Sure, eventually we'll all have a high-bandwidth connection all of the time. But until that happens, a useful offline mode is a critical feature for many users.
Re:Webmail for everyone but power users? Nah. (Score:2)
And...what about people with multiple email addresses? It isn't that hard to set up Thunderbird/Mozilla Suite, and it saves you having to open like 3 browser windows (or ideally tabs) to check your webmail.
Re:Webmail for everyone but power users? Nah. (Score:2)
Unless you are on a Mac or Linux that is.
Re:Webmail for everyone but power users? Nah. (Score:5, Interesting)
In most cases, I've had a pretty difficult time explaining the POP paradigm to less tech-savvy folks anyway. Before I manage to fix things, they don't understand why their friends are getting bounced emails about "full accounts" when their local inbox in OE is empty. Gmail and other webmail services remove that confusion and additionally provide the feature that the email-checking experience is roughly identical on any machine they use to check their mail. Non-power users simply don't consider it worth the effort to use a local mail reader.
I'm unconvinced by webmail! (Score:3, Insightful)
Bobbins. Even users who would join the luddites given half a chance, in my experience, prefer to use a proper mail client as soon as email becomes a part of everyday life.
I'm a fan of Thunderbird (in its new 1.5beta form) - though even with that I'm frustrated by the lack of support for updatable LDAP (or other shared) address books. That and 'grammar checking' are the two things I wish FOSS could catch up with. Outlook & exchange have had these essentials covered for years. FOSS needs a lightweight feature-complete email client - I'm still waiting.
Prefer thunderbird (Score:5, Interesting)
1. Evolution deletes mail by putting it into a virtual folder and hiding the original message in your inbox. This is ok and seamless to the end user UNLESS you happen to also use webmail. In which case your inbox will be cluttered by messages you thought you'd gotten rid of ages ago. The evolution team has flat out refused to address this issue and has been calling this 'not a bug' (which is true) since 2001.
2. Same as above but for Junk Mail.
3. Finding unread messages in Evolution is difficult. Sorting in general is more flexible in Thunderbird IMHO.
4. Thunderbird is cross-platform. From a corporate standpoint this has let me train the entire staff on Thunderbird before installing linux on any workstation. Once linux is installed, they will be using all their familiar apps but without the viruses, spyware, and blue screens of death.
5. Thunderbird will eventually get calendaring as part of Mozilla Lightning. While that's probably years away, I am patient and hopefuly that this will allow us to eventually get back full exchange-type functionality. Regardless, the calendar is not critical for our office.
Evolution does have some great features, notably beagle integration which I would love love love to see in Thunderbird. Unfortunately I don't have the needed talent to make that happen..
I always try really hard to use evolution because of beagle integration and I always end up going back to Thunderbird which I feel is a good enough client to satisfy the typical corporate desktop. At least for small businesses who don't need the calendar.
Re:Prefer thunderbird (Score:4, Interesting)
7. Evolution Palm integration sucks. Without the simplest things like category exchange, you end up with XXX entries in the address book with no easy way to keep different types separate.
I gave up on it until the dev team realize that they're needs aren't the needs of the general public and certainly aren't the needs of the business user.
Re:Prefer thunderbird (Score:3, Informative)
Huh? This one I just don't understand. Finding unread messages is trivial in Evolution - just look in the "Unread Messages" virtual folder which contains all unread messages, and only unread messages. If for some reason your copy of evolution didn't come configured with such a thing, it's trivial to set up (Tools->Virtual Folder Editor create a new one and set "Status is not read" as the criteria
Ridiculous (Score:2)
bah to webmail (Score:2, Insightful)
Office and Photoshop (Score:2)
Yo, Linus, are you listening? How come you don't support MS Office? Get with it, man!
Evolution (Score:5, Funny)
Although I have a feeling it would never be too popular in Kansas.
Re:Evolution (Score:3, Funny)
Ummm... what? (Score:2)
This has got to be annother of those troll articles.
Now I RTFA (Score:5, Informative)
All you need... (Score:2)
No, really.
Not 100% accurate... (Score:2)
I for one am looking forward to seeing a true competitor to Exchange.
I use Thunderbird because... (Score:4, Interesting)
* Leaving POP3 mail on the server is all-or-nothing. I'd like to see the "delete after X days", "delete after it's gone from the inbox" options that have existed in other POP3 clients for the past ten years or so.
* Displaying large messages is slooooow. As a sysadmin, I regularly deal with 1-5MB log files in my email. If I have to wait 30 seconds each for them to display, I'm not gonna use that program.
* No advanced search. You can't search more than a single mailbox at a time.
On the upside, the GPG integration is better than any other mail client I've used. Still, until they can deal with these fairly basic problems/lack of features, it's a no-go.
What email user isn't a power user? (Score:2)
"I think webmail will soon be replacing client side readers for all but power users"
Your task is to go find me some email users who don't behave they're power users. This is kind of the line of thinking that drives many public transit programs; if we make it better, everyone else (not me) will use it...
Webmail? Not really... (Score:2)
For instance, would Microsoft or the FBI trust Google to hold its corporate e-mail system?
Webmail here doesn't sound realistic.
Webmail is insufficient (Score:2)
-efficient search and sorting capabilities
-spell checkers
-document management (attachments folders)
-good filtering
There isn't a webmail I've seen that comes close to matching Tiger's Mail.app, or even the slow but useful Entourage 2004.
Slashdot editors are very different people... (Score:2)
This kind of thing hampers the ability of Slashdot editors to be good editors. Slashdot editors are very different people than average. In fact, many people who have little computer knowledge spend a half hour a day or more answering email, and those people need backups of all their email. Email is the preferred method of communicating with business people.
Web Based E-mail Security (Score:2)
But I don't know if that means that most business users will move over to web-based. There are too many convenience reasons to
Would *someone* RTFS? (Score:2, Redundant)
What it turned up was that:
After that there was a speculation that maybe e-mail is still the killer app, or maybe that Linux needs better mail apps, or something.
It doesn't help that this is /. pointing to a hosed article in ZD citing coverage [desktoplinux.com] in desktoplinux.com
telnet and SMTP (Score:2)
MAIL FROM: xxxx
RCPT TO: yyy
DATA
The msg
.
QUIT
What more does one need?
Corporations and web based email (Score:2)
For Joe Public
Re:Corporations and web based email (Score:2)
E-mail is the least of the worries. (Score:2)
Novell integration and NT server integration
Virus protection (no system is immune from users)
Automatic updates (push and pull).
software management beyond updates (load/unload un/authorized software)
5250 and 3270 emulation
Office must run on it.
Oh, and all of it must have support available 24/7 from known companies. Then to top it off we will need 3 vendors to provide versions of their software to run under linux which will never happen.
E-Mail is the least of the worries. Its all the other piece
The problem is calendaring, not email. (Score:2)
This has been a big hole for 5 years now. There are a many hurdles to be overcome before Microsoft's stranglehold on corperate infrastructres is loosened. It's nice to see some attention called to this, one of the biggest.
Why do we dance around the truth? (Score:5, Insightful)
For example: I work in the dental industry. We use digital xrays and a computerized practice manager. There are few valid options for a practice manager running on linux, and NO digital xray apps.
Hence, we use windows.
I think if you go looking, you will see it's much to same for other industries.
Re:Why do we dance around the truth? (Score:3, Informative)
WebSphere, too. For standalone, and for WEB-based apps.
You can say what you want about java being inadequate, but it's the way to make cross-platform apps, and it works.
I don't like standalone apps, I develop web apps, with some ajax-stye interaction, because of ease of deployment, but I honestly believe that java is the way to go if you want cross platform apps.
With SWT and GCJ, you can even build native graphical
Plus you have the best developer envi
Don't feed the troll (Score:3)
No, if you care about Linux on the desktop we need exactly two things.
1. An open replacement for Microsoft Exchange, so Evolution's connector isn't forever chasing Exchange's taillights and so more shops can get the Exchange monkey off their back. In the same vein as OpenDocument, establish an open standard for the scheduling and calendaring features of Ecchange PHBs love so and ram them hard enough Exchange and Outlook must fully implement them.
2. Pushing a wee bit harder for OpenDocument. Break MS Office's stranglehold on the world's data files and what OS is under your Office productivity app isn't nearly as important.
This isn't hard, Microsoft understood it perfectly when they stated the key to victory was to decommoditize the protocols. So long as they succeed in that they keep winning. And just as obviously if we can commoditize everything important in IT, mail, calendaring, directory services, file sharing, etc, we win.
Yer kidding right? (Score:2)
The key to victory is corps willingly adopting linux on the desktop, and furthermore, vendors *supporting* it (you know, as in writing drivers and recognizing when someone calls in with linux on their dell box.)
Until that point in time, linux will be a niche player.
The Little OS that Could (Score:2)
Linux Hindrance... (Score:2)
I first began to interact with *nix environments in ernest while working for a now absorbed (by Earthlink) isp/hosting provider. There were growing pains, and when there w
Exchange server web interface requires IE for some (Score:2)
Initially, it didn't apply my filters to my new email There was no obvious way to modify server side filters from Evolution. No problem... I used Firefox to connect to the Exchange web interface, and logged in. Hmm... No way to modify server side filters. I called IT. They said "use IE".
I figure a way to fire
Let me be the first to say... (Score:2)
lack of what? (Score:2)
Uh, what? The selection of email clients for *nix OSes is one area that isn't lacking too sorely. We have email clients for darn near every kind of user and situation. Evolution, KMail, Thunderbird, Pine, Mutt, Opera,
Calendaring is not e-mail. (Score:4, Insightful)
-- sas
Re:Calendaring is not e-mail. (Score:3, Interesting)
E-mail. You e-mail me a note suggesting a meeting at a certain time, I look at my schedule and what the meeting's about and either shoot you an acceptance and mark it on my calendar, suggest a different time or just send back a regrets-decline note. The advantage is that this works no matter which e-mail clients and calendar system each of us is using, and works when I have priorities and things on my schedule that you aren't supposed to be aware of.
Scale (Score:3, Insightful)
It's the calender and meetings! (Score:4, Insightful)
If a linux program can integrate with email to schedule tasks and meetings and have that information on a central server that everyone can view then that is all they really need.
Well... They also need server side rules and out of office replies.
Oh thirdly, they need the ability to recall messages and see if messages have been read by recipient. Its a corporate thing, trust me.
Oh and delegation! All these corp suits have this administrative assistants who need to be able to modify their calenders, read, their emails, send on their behalf, and then schedule meetings and set reminders.
Outlook can do all of the above, so can Groupwise, and so can Lotus Notes (well except the recall message and read receipt feature).
If a Linux program (or OS X program for that matter) can do all of the above then companies will be able to switch without too much problem. Pop mail and simple Imap won't cut it.
Perception win again (Score:3, Insightful)
They're not saying what they mean (Score:4, Insightful)
They don't really mean email. They mean a lot of extra stuff, including things I would never guess is email-related, such as calendars. Well, a todo list isn't "email!" They should have said what they really mean: that the platform is weak on "groupware" or something like that. That may be debatable too, but at least then they would be saying something that isn't completely stupid, misleading, and insulting/flamebait.
As for webmail, webmail is something I'll never take seriously, because you can't have privacy with webmail. Cryptography must be performed at a trusted endpoint, not a remote server. Webmail is a technological step backwards for email, simply one of those bad ideas left-over from the dot-com era, whose flashiness and "coolness" has allowed it to survive in spite of its fundamental flaws.
It's only a matter of time until some well-written news story breaks where some government gets caught red-handed drift-net-fishing through lots of innocent people's email (maybe combined with the realization that someone's robot is reading your email to decide what to advertise to you). When that happens, more people will wake up to the fact that having email be unencrypted is just plain dumb. How many times that can happen before critical mass is achieved, I have no idea -- but the day is coming, and it will be death to webmail.
Uh... (Score:4, Insightful)
I thought one of the major complaints about desktop Linux was its inability to back a single pony, so to speak. That there were so many alternatives and competing products that the whole landscape suffered. That used to be the line, at least.
Now, apparently, it's the fact that there aren't enough choices. Well, guess what? That's wrong too. You've got the big names, the Outlook killers: Evolution, Thunderbird, KMail; and the smaller, more specialized ones: Sylpheed Claws or one of the eleventy billion other clients on Freshmeat; and if you need Real Ultimate Email Power more than anything, there's still nothing around that even comes close to the flexibility of Procmail+Mutt+Vim or Gnus.
Truth is, though, that none of this matters. Huge companies are willing to give email away for free, make it highly available, and give you more storage capacity than you'd get if you were willing to pay (my Exchange account at work is limited to ~100MB, Gmail gives me >2GB). You get collaborative spam filtering, virus scanning, keyboard shortcuts for nerds like me who want to blow through mail, some of the best search algorithms in the world with near-instant speed, universal access from anywhere, and now hot new drag and drop UIs.
In fact, probably the first thing AJAX will kill (and I'm not even *that* big on AJAX) is traditional email. Email has long been a pain in the ass, and offloading it to companies who can deal with its site-by-site issues in bulk (blacklisting, storage, availability) is a huge win for people without the resources of a Fortune 500 company. The day Gmail lets you point your own domain's MX record at their servers and deliver mail for your own domain to your Gmail account (making this a cheap, but for-pay feature would be a fabulous way to make money on the service) is the day I take my SMTP server down for good.
Email client? Hah. I'm looking for ways to get email software and traditional email infrastructure as far away from my computers as possible.
Re:HUH? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:HUH? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:HUH? (Score:2)
I highly doubt that IT depts will want to put their internal systems and users on web mail (not that I think it is bad, just that it "aint gonna happen"). The key to linux at home is linux on corp desktops, and the key to that is a _fully_ compatible office suite, admin panel and all.
-nB
Re:Try outlook web access... (Score:3, Insightful)
BUT
Outlook Web Access is just plain crap. Its slow, requires oodles of bandwidth, and is only about 20% that Outlook 2003 really is. Dont believe me? Try to open 3 shared calendars in OWA. It doesnt work. SBS makes up for it in other areas.
I think there is something to Webmail replacing Desktop email, but not for a long,
Re:Try outlook web access... (Score:3, Informative)
Check out his post history, they're all "look at this great thing that microsoft makes"
Astroturfing is worse than ads above the pisser
Re:HUH? (Score:5, Insightful)
the email clients should conform to the backend that is being used in reality, not the other way around.
Re:HUH? (Score:2)
The calendar function is like none other, and Outlook 2003's junkmail handling and security is very good IMO; I especially like the fact that it will not display images and scripting within an email unless the address/domain is whitelisted.
Re:HUH? (Score:4, Informative)
http://tml-blog.blogspot.com/ [blogspot.com]
He speaks of running evolution on windows in the 3rd or 4th blog entry.
Re:HUH? (Score:2, Insightful)
I use mutt [mutt.org] and vim [vim.org] for email. Other than emacs, it doesn't get more powerful than that.
I think they probably meant easy-to-use.
They don't understand what they want. (Score:3, Insightful)
#1. Shared email folders. I should be able to share a folder with anyone else in the company. (Totally amazing would be the ability to do so, securely, with anyone on the Internet).
#2. Shared calendars. Same as #1.
#3. Send appointments/meeting requests to people via #2.
#4. Delegation. I should be able to assign various rights to my email to other people so they
Re:HUH? (Score:3, Interesting)
A: They don't exist. I work at an IT shop that supports over 40,000 users and we went out of our way to find a solution that would scale out and provide the capability to serve email & calendaring. The Outlook/Exchange combo was by far the best solution.
There are plenty of good email servers out there. But there aren't alot of good, robust calendar servers out there that are price competitive with Exchange. And if you need shared mailbox
Re:HUH? (Score:3)
Every view is cusomizable. The arrangement and display of mail can be changed to support whatever you would like.
Columns are automatically changed based on the available screen space - something not seen implemented in any other e-mail client.
The calendaring function is unsurpassed. Especially in a domain deployment.
You can also compose an e-mail and send it without using the mouse. In a GUI this is special, command line not so much
Scripting is incred
Re:AJAX+Webmail (Score:2, Informative)
Re:AJAX+Webmail (Score:3, Interesting)
I would dearly love to see something like SquirrelMail expanded to include fully functional centralized calendars and contact management. I could probably drop Exchange/Outl
Re: Outlook Express????? (Score:2)
The best way to think of it is to imagine a Leatherman for on-the-road field sales staff and their managers.
Power users Drive The Desktop (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Power users Drive The Desktop (Score:3, Interesting)
If they can't get to their mail because the web server's bogged down, they will definitely be upset about it.
Re:Pine (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Pine (Score:3, Insightful)
Attachments: check.
Address book: check.
Managed folders: check.
Menu-driven interface: check.
Configurability: check.
Full headers: check.
No bloat: check.
Secure: check.
While pine has the option to launch external apps for custom content I don't subscribe to that group. If a file is sent to me I'd muc
Re:web-based email (Score:2)