On 2-Sep-04, at 7:36 PM, Brad Knowles wrote:

I'm picking up some contacts within Apple, and they tell me that the team which is responsible for developing and maintaining MacOS X Server is non-responsive to them, too. They don't just blow off their customers, they also blow off their co-workers.

There's not much you can do in the face of those kinds of problems.

The pity of it is that on the regular MacOS X it is trivial to get Mailman going. After a head crash took out my hard drive last week I installed MacOS 10.3 on the new drive, set up my network environment, and made sure my connections to the net were OK. Next I downloaded Postfix Enabler, ran it to set up and start Postfix, checked my addresses were working, then download Mailman 2.1.5, followed the regular install instructions, ran check_perms -f, linked the alias db to Postfix per the Postfix READ ME, fixed up httpd.conf, and fired up my lists. I still have to set MM as a startup application, but that's just laziness on my part. I used to run qmail with MM, but the Postfix set up was so easy I couldn't be bothered jumping through djb's hoops (that laziness factor again).


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