On Mon, Dec 03, 2001 at 03:40:48PM -0800, Ujwal S. Sathyam wrote: > This sounds really interesting.
.. furthermore, it sounds like a wonderful business model, given that nothing else really does this yet. It seems that even Evolution doesn't, from the examples of discussion on here that I've seen - for example, our calendaring at the moment is p2p, right? How will Evo(GPL) handle this when Evo(Proprietary) appears? Is it really planned to have a version of iCal that wanders around client->client as well as a version that talks to servers? It all sounds a bit, um, icky. And I'm guessing that the development of the connector isn't going to be at all publically discussed. And I'm a little frustrated that the mail client that I thought was this huge effort on the part of the community to write the app that's going to be a /huge/ part in bringing Linux to the desktop is only going to be the answer to Outlook in a "Yeah, use Evolution. It's cool. Oh, but you have to pay for Exchange interoperability." way, and that no-one mentioned this before. Feels almost like we have to start again, to find another way of arguing "Linux is free. You can do _this_ with it." to our bosses. Anyway. Someone had to rant. I think the more fair argument is that, well, /I/ haven't put any code into Evo. And most of us haven't. And there's no way in hell it'd be here if Ximian hadn't hired people and all of this, so it's at least justified. But enough. I'm off to try and get my 1.0 install alive again. - ~C, a little disillusioned. -- $a="printf.net"; Chris Ball | chris@void.$a | www.$a | finger: chris@$a As to luck, there's the old miners' proverb: Gold is where you find it. _______________________________________________ evolution maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/evolution