We've had Office 365 as the university's official system for over a year now. 
It has been evolving and improving though I still do not like it. Many Uk 
universities use either that or Google's services, and the main reason is 
reduced costs and simplified service maintenance, as wellas keeping students 
happy by offering a cloud-based service with all the add-ons already mentioned 
in this thread.

I have found it reasonably, and increasingly, usable via the Outlook Web 
Application, thunderbird and mutt, under Linux. So I agree with those whose 
meesage has basically been 'Don't panic'

________________________________________
From: [email protected] 
<[email protected]> on behalf of Chris Schanzle 
<[email protected]>
Sent: 09 February 2015 17:10
To: Yasha Karant; [email protected]
Subject: Re: SL7 client for Microsoft ActiveSync

On 02/09/2015 01:40 AM, Yasha Karant wrote:
> My university IT department, external to any academic or research unit, has 
> made the arbitrary decision to force us to use a Microsoft Office365 external 
> distributed proprietary (cloud) service for official university email.  
> Although this service nominally supports IETF SMTP and IMAP protocols, it is 
> abysmally slow when so doing. The campus IT spokesperson has explained that 
> only a client compliant with Microsoft ActiveSync will fully function with 
> this imposed proprietary closed system service -- translation:  if one wants 
> reasonable speed in email, use an ActiveSync client -- probably from 
> Microsoft.

I think your campus IT spokesperson is wrong, or you are not paying enough to 
get good service. :-)

We moved to the vaporous 365 cloud about two years ago.  It has not been great. 
 They change stuff.  They move you to different 'pods'. They roll out changes 
to some pods and not others.  They change things based on our special auth 
requirements and other stuff, and it breaks occasionally.  Nearly always the 
web-based method works. Of course IE works best, but firefox works well enough 
also.

While thunderbird downloads all the mail, which in my case and others is 10's 
of thousands of emails ~6 GB, it will be slow.  But once synced, it is 
reasonably fast...certainly not as fast as having it local, but reasonable to 
use throughout the day.

Initially they did some serious throttling of "abusers" that dramatically 
impaired use while thunderbird downloaded messages (e.g., rejecting access to 
Sent folder when sending msgs...retry...retry...done), but that changed about a 
year ago. Sometimes, often near times of Thunderbird updates but not always, 
something decides to invalidate all my folders and a full redownload is needed. 
 Takes about half a day now, where before it was about a week, and thunderbird 
needed several restarts as something would abort and wouldn't recover.

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