I'd be intersted in seeing a presentation on this... Shawn
-----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Aaron J. Seigo Sent: Monday, May 10, 2004 10:22 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [clug-talk] kolab -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 hey all... i've mentioned kolab a few times in recent times... and now we have our first successful kolab install =) we're pretty excited about it as it's the first time we've actually had the opportunity to install and run a Kolab server. the best part is that it actualy works as advertised. imagine that, a Free Software groupware server! =))) "we" is Andy Kopciuch and myself. this first install is for a local client. we went with Kolab for them primarily due to the admin web interface: they aren't tech people, but need to manage their email. after Andy and I (well, mostly Andy ;) played around with building the Kolab packages from source for Fedora Core 1 (which is what the client is running on their server), we got all the RPMs built and installed. from there it was a simple matter of /etc/init.d/kolab start. that got us pop3, pop3+TLS, pop3s (SSL), IMAP, IMAP+TLS, imaps (SSL), LDAP addressbook, seive IMAP filters, ASMTP (authenticated SMTP) w/TLS, shared folders, and a spanky (SSL secured) web admin interface. we didn't install the web client as that's another adventure (they are still working on stabalizing that, though apparently it's usable as is) all in all, it's a pretty impressive set up for a rather minimal effort (esp if you already have binaries built for you ;) ... Mandrake is already shipping with Kolab, and I expect SUSE and others to follow suit as well. adding users, setting up the server, turning on/off the various features (e.g. POP3 or IMAP), setting up folders, etc... is all done via the web interface which is quite simple to use. on the downside, the more complex stuff (like multiple virtual domains) requires more by-hand work editting the actual config files. but for your basic one-domain set up, it's more that adequate. performance is quite good, as one would expect. and the future looks bright as well, as Kolab2 is already in the works! here's the announcement on the mailing list: http://kolab.org/pipermail/kolab-users/2004-April/000092.html the big highlights are that an Outlook client is part of the Kolab2 roadmap (right now it's an add-on you have to get from various third parties), KDE's Kontact will be the official non-Windows client and a host of features are being added including: ACLs User groups and quotas Shared folder support across the supported clients (read: Outlook ;) Overview calendars Delegation (e.g. administrative assistant <-> boss) Project collaberation Virus filtering Multi-location capabilities Improved web admin this is, once again, being funded by contracts won by a group of German companies. very impressive stuff! if there is interest, Andy and I would be happy to do a full Kolab presentation for CLUG ... - -- Aaron J. Seigo GPG Fingerprint: 8B8B 2209 0C6F 7C47 B1EA EE75 D6B7 2EB1 A7F1 DB43 while (!horse()); cart(); -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.2-rc1-SuSE (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFAoFTh1rcusafx20MRAl5RAJ9HyJ4gGA2ydRQNdQwMqFzNVclYxQCcCid5 WXJSb/iRgQl/pH9Zano7iAM= =9SPP -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ clug-talk mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://clug.ca/mailman/listinfo/clug-talk_clug.ca _______________________________________________ clug-talk mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://clug.ca/mailman/listinfo/clug-talk_clug.ca

