Hi Steve
Casting your mind back to the below discussion, I appreciate your
suggestion. I've been having a look at the Google Apps pages, but what
I'm unclear about, and hoping you or anyone else might be able to
enlighten me, is what will Google's Gmail Premier service do for me
which I
Hi Steven
On Thursday, October 30, 2008, at 08:28AM, Steven Knowles [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Hi Steve
Casting your mind back to the below discussion, I appreciate your
suggestion. I've been having a look at the Google Apps pages, but what
I'm unclear about, and hoping you or anyone else
Morning All,
Pending on your Corporate Computer Security planning (intranet,
internet or extranet) and laws, I find it very hard to go pass Google
as Steve suggested. But be very careful in checking these laws based
on your business model and corporate responsibilities.
Accessibility
To all who have commented (Steve, Rob, Rob, Matthew) - much
appreciated. Have been considering your comments closely. And Google
certainly sounds like it might be worth a run. I haven't heard anyone
come up with a good reason NOT to use Google yet.
Thanks again all.
Cheers, Steven
On
On 20/10/2008, at 7:48 PM, Steven Knowles wrote:
I'm looking for some advice in terms of setting up a corporate email
environment on the Mac platform (but catering for users of other
platforms who would be potentially anywhere).
I'm quite familiar with pop email accounts, understand the
Give me a call if you like Steven. I have set up Mac Mail Servers for
many of my clients over the years. The most recent version of Mac OS X
Server 10.5.5 provides a robust and mature mail service which includes
POP, IMAP, authenticated SMTP and Webmail.
IMAP does most of what you require.
On 20/10/2008, at 7:48 PM, Steven Knowles wrote:
I'm looking for some advice in terms of setting up a corporate email
environment on the Mac platform (but catering for users of other
platforms who would be potentially anywhere).
http://www.kerio.com
Kerio Mail Server is pretty much the
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