> haven't seen any movement there in months, years... why
not work on that other well-supported project instead?' Or to paraphrase
the well known quote - "contributors contribute to those projects who
help themselves"...
...is it just me?
No, it's not just you.
To me this project looks quite abandoned, and to express it more
plastically , it's "movements" are of a "chicken without a head" , and
it doesn't have much until it's over either.
One could say that this shouldn't be such a big problem, since it's open
source, (there's source code and stuff), right?
Well for me it is, and mainly because it's too complicated for me to be
able to be useful somehow, or "fix it myself".
This is why I switched most of my email server installations to JES:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/javaemailserver
An extremely simple (one could say quite primitive cause it doesn't do
too much) mail server that seem to just work.
It has even a few things 2.3.1 does not have (or are not simple to setup):
- setup in a few minutes even by a non-developer
- very small - only a few KB (also consumes few resources)
- multi-domain support out of the box (just enumerate them)
- settings changes on the fly (without restarting the server)
The biggest advantage for me however is that it is *very* small and
"non-abstract" so I can quickly understand it and "fix it myself".
The loading tests I've made also shown me that it can handle without
problems what most small and medium companies need.
Of course, I'm still hoping that JAMES would take off, but with each day
it looks less and less probable :(.
Demetrios.
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