Date: Tue, 12 Jul 2005 09:48:39 -0400 (EDT) From: John Von Essen <john@essenz.com> To: freebsd-isp@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Webmail Recommendations Message-ID: <20050712093556.Y50125@beck.quonix.net> In-Reply-To: <001b01c586e3$ffadb700$d580a23f@lisac> References: <20050712120023.0C43916A420@hub.freebsd.org> <001b01c586e3$ffadb700$d580a23f@lisac>
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There is nswm (http://www.nikosoft.net/nswm/). I have found it to be very usefull when you run a traditional POP3/SMTP mail setup, but then want a light-weight webmail interface for clients that doesn't shake things up too much. nswm is just a web-based pop3-client that reads (doesn't delete) msgs off the pop3 server. So when a user goes home and uses outlook, msgs no longer appear in nswm. Its great for POP3 users, who say, go on vacation, and then want to see some of those new emails. Once they get home, they then pop it all off. In my experience, you either do IMAP with 100% Webmail, or POP3 only - and some sort of pop3-ish webmail interface to satisfy customers. Obviously, if you have alot of remote users, you dont do IMAP over the net - so thats why you force 100% webmail participation. Also, nswm is perl based - so you can customize it until your blue in the face. -john On Tue, 12 Jul 2005, Lisa Casey wrote: > Hi, > > I've used Null WebMail for several years now. It's not fancy, but it's simple & easy to set up and works well. > > Lisa Casey > Netlink 2000 >
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