On 11/10/2007, Amos Shapira [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 10/10/2007, Leonid Podolny [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
My employer considers switching CM (i.e. source control) system. The
current favorite in the race is ClearCase. Previously, at my previous
place of work, we worked with
On 11/10/2007, Jonathan Ben Avraham [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Amos,
There is no built-in development framework in SVN like there is in
ClearCase UCM. With SVN you can role your own development framework using
the hooks, but that's very different from having one ready-made for you.
IMHO the
Hi,
When I wrote that blocking ads with AdBlockPlus (ABP) on Tapuz forums made
me get many empty pages Shachar suggested using AdBlock and said that it
works well for him.
I switched to AdBlock and at first visit I though that I saw and improvement
but very quickly the situation went back to the
On 10/11/07, Jonathan Ben Avraham [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
There is no built-in development framework in SVN like there is in
ClearCase UCM.
Agreed, but you've also mentioned that developers rarely take the time to
understand ClearCase. In the army, we also tried to implement UCM (the
Hi!
On Thursday 11 October 2007, Amos Shapira wrote:
On 10/10/2007, Leonid Podolny [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
My employer considers switching CM (i.e. source control) system. The
current favorite in the race is ClearCase. Previously, at my previous
place of work, we worked with
Hi list,
My company, a rapidly growing startup (right now about 15 employees,
probably around 50 within a year), is looking to upgrade our current
mail server to a full fledged Exchange or similar solution.
Before we're surrendering to M$, I'd like to know if anyone knows of a
full FOSS solution
Hi Ilya,
The performance that I saw was quite reasonable. True, doing commits in
ClearCase is not as fast as in SVN or CVS, but not a whole lot slower.
ClearCase certainly is overhead without benefit for five engineers. But
for 80 engineers at three geographic locations and multiple product
Zimbra OS edition (if it still exists)?
- yba
On Thu, 11 Oct 2007, Dvir Volk wrote:
Date: Thu, 11 Oct 2007 13:31:05 +0200
From: Dvir Volk [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Israeli Linux mailing list linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il
Subject: FOSS alternative to Exchange
Hi list,
My company, a rapidly growing
Amos Shapira wrote:
Finally, I heard from people who worked at CheckPoint (Shachar? not
sure, I knew a few)
I joined CheckPoint when they had just started talking about migrating
to ClearCase (from CVS). I left CheckPoint (two years and three months
later) at about the point where ClearCase
You might want to checkout Scalix, OpenGroupware.org and openXchange,
all of which have (more or less) all the features you mentioned.
OpenXchange requires that you buy a connector for Outlook access, but
it's pretty cheap.
I think Scalix provides the Outlook connector for free, but
Hi,
Does anyone on this list own a 072 landline and has already sniffed what
their adapter box talks to?
As I've gathered, they allow accessing their VoIP servers from any place in
the world, not just from inside 012's network, so theoretically you could
use it from a random WiFi connection.
Any updates regarding Hebrew support for any of them?
( mainly composing editor supporting RTL )
On 11/10/2007 18:49, Lior Okman wrote:
--snip--
Open-Xchange - http://www.open-xchange.com/header/community_area.html
OpenGroupware.org - http://opengroupware.org/
Scalix -
thanks,
anyone has real experience in using them in a real business environment?
On 10/11/07, Lior Okman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
You might want to checkout Scalix, OpenGroupware.org and openXchange,
all of which have (more or less) all the features you mentioned.
OpenXchange requires that
All of these support IMAP for regular mail, so you can use the mail
client of your choice for email.
Lior
Moshe Leibovitch wrote:
Any updates regarding Hebrew support for any of them?
( mainly composing editor supporting RTL )
On 11/10/2007 18:49, Lior Okman wrote:
--snip--
On 12/10/2007, Lior Okman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
OpenXchange requires that you buy a connector for Outlook access, but
it's pretty cheap.
Last time I tried to look at openXchange (in order to learn about an
exchange alternative when I hoped I'll be asked for it) it looked a pretty
Amos Shapira wrote:
Last time I tried to look at openXchange (in order to learn about an
exchange alternative when I hoped I'll be asked for it) it looked a pretty
complicated task to set it up. Is this true or did I get the wrong
impression?
And as Dvir asked already - does anyone here have
`SunRocket gizmo' is, or was, (one of) their phone adapter.You might want to
google for it.- Original Message -From: Ilya Konstantinov [EMAIL
PROTECTED]Date: Thursday, October 11, 2007 21:32Subject: 012 landline (072)
VoIP settingsTo: linux-il linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il Hi, Does anyone on
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
`SunRocket gizmo' is, or was, (one of) their phone adapter.You might want
to google for it.
Judging by the port-forwarding suggested at
http://www.dslreports.com/forum/remark,14287202 it would appear to be a SIP
device.
Geoff.
On 12/10/2007, Lior Okman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've installed all three, in order to test them. I haven't actually used
them in production, or for very long in the test environment.
Of them all, I would recommend Scalix, as the best documented and
easiest to install.
..
Hope this
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