i'd look into lotus notes, it requires glibc2.1 ..so if u use debian u
need potato.. but it has the name and the support behind it to convince
the dumbass suits to use linux :/
we'd run it at my other job but they dont want to spend $1200 for the
software. with notes to get that functionality
On Thu, 03 Feb 2000 17:00:18 -0600
Kent West [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
What this boils down to is: Is there a program for Linux that will
do essentially the same thing as Schedule+?
CyberScheduler from CrossWinds. Linux, Windows, web, text mode, etc
versions, and Palm support...
--
J C
You can try Ontime, www.ontime.com. I've used it in Windows
environments and it works fairly well. I could not find on their site
what O/Ses are supported, but they state they support mulitiple
networking environments. It might be worth an email to find out.
Mike
--- Kent West [EMAIL
On 04-Feb-00 Ted Harding wrote:
On 03-Feb-00 Kent West wrote:
What this boils down to is: Is there a program for Linux
that will do essentially the same thing as Schedule+?
I don't know if it will meet your needs, but have a look at plan:
http://www.IN-Berlin.DE/User/bitrot/plan.html
On Thu, Feb 03, 2000 at 03:55:32PM -0800, aphro wrote:
i'd look into lotus notes, it requires glibc2.1 ..so if u use debian u
NO! Exchange is bad but Notes is truly appalling. Picture an email client
that cannot mark messages as replied to, that cannot even begin to match the
functionality
+ --- Kent West [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
+
+ What this boils down to is: Is there a program for Linux
+ that will do essentially the same thing as Schedule+?
It might be worth looking at the Corporate Time range. The server side
doesn't support Linux as yet but Solaris etc. Clients exist
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