Just stay up to date with RoundCube, PHP loves exploits.

Other than that, it's a decent client that looks nice and works well.


On 11/5/2015 8:18 AM, Mike Hammett wrote:
There seems to be two camps. One where people are running away form their own e-mail servers and then those that embrace it. I haven't found e-mail to be that difficult to manage.



-----
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com

<https://www.facebook.com/ICSIL><https://plus.google.com/+IntelligentComputingSolutionsDeKalb><https://www.linkedin.com/company/intelligent-computing-solutions><https://twitter.com/ICSIL>

Midwest Internet Exchange
http://www.midwest-ix.com

<https://www.facebook.com/mdwestix><https://www.linkedin.com/company/midwest-internet-exchange><https://twitter.com/mdwestix>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*From: *"Chuck Hogg" <[email protected]>
*To: *[email protected]
*Sent: *Thursday, November 5, 2015 6:01:35 AM
*Subject: *Re: [AFMUG] Roundcube

I hope you are charging handsomely for email. We just quit it for our customer base...and only had 2-3 complaints. Everyone already has an email address.



Regards,
Chuck

On Thu, Nov 5, 2015 at 3:22 AM, Eric Kuhnke <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Any tips of tricks for success with using Roundcube to provide
    webmail to individual end users (not a single domain corporate
    environment)?

    Server side is postfix + spamassassin + dovecot.

    I have a successful 'test' setup of roundcube running in a VM
    doing TLSv1.2 on smtp and imap, logged into several user accounts
    on test domains on the dovecot server.

    Wondering if anyone has run into hiccups or weird things when
    using roundcube in a production environment.




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