Surely you recognize the absurdity of 14 servers for a few hundred mailboxes.

Might as well give each customer their own personal mailserver.  Wait, was 
Hillary one of your customers?

From: Mike Hammett 
Sent: Thursday, November 05, 2015 8:44 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Roundcube

I have a few hundred mailboxes.

I don't really have much for user support issues. I've had to revoke accounts a 
couple times from users that kept handing out their password like it was candy 
at a parade. No real forgotten password problems. Setup just works. Hack 
attempts are shut down before they even try valid credentials.

I'm running a seven server Zimbra cluster. Whenever I can get a little bit of 
time, it'll be geo and network diverse (separate cluster for all but mailboxes 
elsewhere with the mailboxes coming in about a year). It will be up to about 14 
servers by then.




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



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




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: "Lewis Bergman" <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thursday, November 5, 2015 8:29:00 AM
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Roundcube


How many thousands of users do you have? Running the service is pretty cheap. I 
built my own sendmail+Dovecot system which was really cheap. Then I got to a 
place where I didn't want my time tied up with that so we went to Magicmail 
which was still pretty cheap. Through all of it it was the support that was the 
big dollar sign. If you set expectations differently maybe yours would be 
cheaper. All I know is I spent a lot of user tech support time on it. More than 
anything else by far. Kind of a hidden expense but definitely still there. We 
had, I think, 8000 users on the system when we sold. Maybe a couple hundred 
domains.

On Thu, Nov 5, 2015 at 8:11 AM Mike Hammett <[email protected]> wrote:

  What are people doing that's so expensive? I could have 10x - 50x the number 
of mailboxes as I have and it wouldn't cost me any more than it does now, other 
than some disks....  which aren't expensive.

  I guess I would probably move from the community version to the service 
provider version, but at that point that's under $0.20/mailbox/month. Not 
really a major expense.





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



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




------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  From: "Lewis Bergman" <[email protected]>
  To: [email protected]
  Sent: Thursday, November 5, 2015 8:08:29 AM

  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Roundcube


  For me it wasn't about difficulty it was about expense. Email, at least how 
we did it, was a cost center not a profit center. I kept it until I sold and 
wish I would have ditched it much sooner. It was by far the biggest tech 
support PITA. 

  I did learn afterward that the longer someone has an email address the more 
they are willing to pay to keep it. I have been raising he fee we charge to use 
those old emails. I am now at $250 a year for a single email and I have people 
begging me not to cut it off. I am still going to, but I think it is 
interesting since I used to give it away.

  I guess what I am saying is that if you do not charge a decent amount for it, 
why do it? The there is the whole minimum volume to be profitable thing that 
comes into play. I just would not keep doing something that doesn't make money. 
If it does, more power to you.


  On Thu, Nov 5, 2015 at 7:18 AM Mike Hammett <[email protected]> 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



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




----------------------------------------------------------------------------

    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]> 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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