>> Minor correction: it is not "SyncML the protocol" which limits the kinds >> of data that can be exchanged, it is "SyncML server XYZ" or "SyncML >> client ABC" which only support certain kinds of data. >> >> > Or are you saying >> > that the SyncMl "intermediate standard format" is effectively cast in >> > stone? >> >> No, it is not. The implementations choose that, with varying success. >> > Both of the above make it even worse to my mind. It means that if I > have a working system with clients A and B connecting via server S > then it's quite possible that clients A and B *wont't* work with a > different server T. In fact, thinking about my experiences so far, > that is *exactly* what happens. Each combination of client A (my > Nokia E71), server (eGroupware, myFunambol, a locally installed > Funambol and ScheduleWorld) and client B (usually evolution) works > slightly differently and has different foibles.
I don't think you understand. SyncML is a document format that can be used by applications providing a certain set of features, like contacts, calendar data, tasks, notes... However, you should still be allowed to make an application that only provides contact info, or an application that only handles tasks. Someone might even want to make an application that only handles notes! Obviously, the clients and servers choose how they want to use the document. The document format, however, is versioned so people know what to expect because that's what SyncML plugins, clients and servers do. Your complaint, is that not all applications understand all other applications datafiles, and that you cannot connect directly to a data source without some mechanism to protect the integrity of the data, etc. That's just how stuff works. Probably won't change, and I certainly hope it never will. You've been complaining for days now; I managed to download, install and configure Funambol, SyncEvolution and Genesis to work with all my PIMs and all my different mobile phones, from scratch, in less than two hours. Are you seeing my point? I didn't rush anything, and I don't have the fastest connection in the world. It really isn't difficult. I really feel that the internet would be a better society if people complained less and fixed more, if people were more interested in learning than they were in making claims. _______________________________________________ Evolution-list mailing list [email protected] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list
