> Products like IMail have a market, however, any company/person that > is a bit more technically inclined should be running an all unix > solution, period.
Technical "inclination" is no predictor of paid free time, making such declarations useless. This kind of chatter reminds me of those that believe that any system that you don't have to touch anymore is therefore a "legacy" system. Len, who has mountains of experience with people who front-end IMail servers with PostFix instead of converting their entire infrastructure, quite fairly noted that IMail does its tasks (POP3, basic SMTP), fully to spec. You need to realize that someone offering POP3 hosting services to 100,000+ users on stable, perfectly-performing, no-touch boxes is not screaming out to get a new POP3 server, no matter how Just-Not-Right (tm) that might seem to Unix partisans. They just want to know that the product is being maintained in good faith by its development team--which is the default assumption until insane pricing accouncements start busy sysadmins worrying about unissued security patches and gouge-grades that previously weren't even twinkles in their eyes. --Sandy ------------------------------------ Sanford Whiteman, Chief Technologist Broadleaf Systems, a division of Cypress Integrated Systems, Inc. e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] SpamAssassin plugs into Declude! http://www.mailmage.com/products/software/freeutils/SPAMC32/download/release/ Defuse Dictionary Attacks: Turn Exchange or IMail mailboxes into IMail Aliases! http://www.mailmage.com/products/software/freeutils/exchange2aliases/download/release/ http://www.mailmage.com/products/software/freeutils/ldap2aliases/download/release/ To Unsubscribe: http://www.ipswitch.com/support/mailing-lists.html List Archive: http://www.mail-archive.com/imail_forum%40list.ipswitch.com/ Knowledge Base/FAQ: http://www.ipswitch.com/support/IMail/
