On 01/18/2010 09:34 PM, Paul Cockings wrote:
> On 18/01/2010 21:26, Stevan Bajić wrote:
>    
>> On Mon, 18 Jan 2010 21:18:18 +0000
>> Paul Cockings<ds...@cytringan.co.uk>   wrote:
>>
>>
>>      
>>> On 18/01/2010 21:14, Stevan Bajić wrote:
>>>
>>>        
>>>>> So the options could be...
>>>>>
>>>>> - send to dspam server on the lan
>>>>> - send to dspam server on the wan
>>>>> - send to dspam relay service
>>>>>
>>>>> I suppose all of these could be setup and a clever bit of coding
>>>>> discovers what is available to the user (ie mobile worker)
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>            
>>>> It's funny we talk again about web services and DSPAM. Tell me one mail 
>>>> client that does web services out of the box? Outlook probably can do web 
>>>> services with the help of IE. I for sure know that Lotus Notes Client can 
>>>> talk to a web service. Have coded a SPAM/HAM plugin for Lotus Notes Client 
>>>> that exactly that. But I used Lotus Domino as the web service provider and 
>>>> then communicated from Notes to Domino to DSPAM. But to bring the 
>>>> discussion back to the original topic: What mail client is capable out of 
>>>> the box to do web services?
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>          
>>> I can't answer that - I'm far to early on in this research. I have much
>>> to learn.
>>>
>>>
>>>        
>> Okay.
>>
>>
>>      
> Is it worth pursuing this quest?   The 'problem' that i see is sometimes
> its not attractive to think about making exchange forward a message for
> a domain it is hosting to an outside address for delivery - This for me
> a a true PITA.   - Maybe I make it too hard.
> My thought was if the Spam/Ham buttons inside the mail client can talk
> directly with the dspam server then it bypasses this whole headache and
> you don't have the retrain mails running back through the mail servers!
> bonus.
>
> My second thought is a service that runs on exchange server which
> watches the 'Junk' folders and sends re-training info back to dspam.
> The users would drag the junk to the junk folder.
>
> - I'm trying to think of ways to make training easy for the end user.
>   From my experience its hard enough to teach people to press spam/ham
> buttons in the mail client, but without taking all the control away from
> users how else can it be done?
>
>    


IRRC, with the DSpam-Addin for Outlook it was possible to (also) retrain 
by submitting directly to the current DSpam webui. Maybe it's time to 
figure out if there's something missing in the code i got from Cumol, 
and fix it! =)


R's,

Hugo Monteiro.

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Hugo Monteiro
Email    : hugo.monte...@fct.unl.pt
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Web      : http://hmonteiro.net

Divisão de Informática
Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia da
                   Universidade Nova de Lisboa
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