![]() I installed this and it looks both like a nice interface and a pretty well-developed product. I might take another look before finally deciding. I had trouble accessing this (may have been an old domain) although I have seen it implemented by some ISPs and it looks nice. IMP looks good but I wasn’t really interested in installing Horde, which appears to be a prerequisite to getting IMP in place. Horde Groupware and IMP Web mail client.It seems to be the preferred client for Ubuntu and is available in your Ubuntu Software Center. I don’t like the way this looks, based on screenshots. The Web mail options I came across included But I do not always have access to an IMAP client when I am out of the house, so I would like to have some Web interface to access my mail. If you’ve got your IMAP set up, you can use any IMAP-capable client to access your e-mail: Mozilla Thunderbird, Postbox, Gnome Evolution, Microsoft Outlook, etc. Once I had it running (and sent an external message in as well as was able to see the Spamassassin blocking), I was ready to look at Web mail. This Postfix How To has less detail than the guide linked above but does get more into Courier testing. After going through the install (and backing out again, for reasons I’ll explain below) I first installed Courier and then tried Dovecot. ![]() ![]() The instructions include installing Courier IMAP and POP3, but you can also install Dovecot ( sudo apt-get install dovecot-common) for that. Once I followed all the steps, I could send messages and see them arrive at the file level of my server. I installed Postfix last night following this guide and it was letter perfect. But if you use Postfix, you’ll need to get a Web mail client to sit on top and access the messages that are coming and going. In conjunction with other programs – like SpamAssassin and Clam AV – it handles the sending and receiving. Once installed, mail would be received and sent and I’d have a way to access it through a Web-based agent. In the past, when I installed an “e-mail server”, it was an all in one piece. Which is like saying murflegag blurglebag to me. This is the default mail transfer agent (MTA) for Ubuntu. This was all done on 10.04 LTS “Lucid Lynx”. If you’re a relative newbie to Ubuntu like me, you may be interested in some of this. So I am starting to look again at Postfix as an option for my e-mail. The all-in-one Web mail solutions I’ve tried – like Axigen and Surgemail – have limits on the number of domains or users you can have with a free version. Document ActionsĪ new criterion has arisen for my e-mail world, and that is the need to run a second e-mail server domain. Now I have a better way to add comments and won’t have to fiddle with it again. ![]() It was too bad to lose some of the comments but I needed the improved comments management so the trade off had to be made. I ended up uninstalling the plonecomment product until I deleted all the comments – both the spam and legitimate comments – and then reinstalled the product. It blocked not only editing, though, but also deleting the comment spam. I wasn’t able to identify exactly what happened but it certainly seemed to be tied to adding the new comment product. ![]() The trouble I found was when I tried to edit a page that had a comment that existed prior to the installation of plonecomments. Add it to your buildout in the eggs and zcml section as laid out at the Quintagroup site. The installation of onecomments went smoothly. Unfortunately, when I installed the comment product, I could no longer edit any documents with a pre-existing comment. Comment spammers had hit two of my pages and I had about 250 comments that I needed to eliminate. As I found out yesterday when I finally had time to try to reinstall the Quintagroup’s Plone Comments tool. Plone 4: Comments Reset by David Whelan The comments function of Plone remains a weak point. ![]()
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