Dear Wiki user,

You have subscribed to a wiki page or wiki category on "James Wiki" for change 
notification.

The following page has been changed by AlanWilliamson:
http://wiki.apache.org/james/JamesVolunteers

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Patrick Hubbard] - Volunteer software polisher.  I 
found James last year and use it to support a bewildering number of demo and 
POC activities, and am completing my own robust replacement for RemoteManager 
to support those activities.  I'd like to see these currently private features 
included in James, especially the remote admin API and simple HTTP admin 
server.  I'm also interested in rewriting aliasing to support unlimited aliases 
thought full user account-address decoupling, (also allowing better LDAP 
integration).  I'm in the business of adding product features that accelerate 
product/solution adoption by end users and want to drive for the day that the 
O'Reilly "James in a Nutshell" is released.
  ----
  [http://www.cybermagic.co.nz/people/damon-rand Damon Rand] - James wannabe. 
Currently running several dozen mail domains on a Win2k server with a 
commercial MTA package. My main problem with the current solution is that mbox 
format makes the file structure difficult to backup and restore -- maildir 
support is essential for me. I want to migrate to an opensource MTA but don't 
want to take the Linux leap -- my skills are on Windows/Java. There should be 
an opensource mailserver that runs natively under Windows and is as well 
respected as Apache HTTPD or Tomcat. I am interested in helping James to be as 
good as my current commercial MTA (eg. better HTTP based user self service) but 
with maildir support and help integrate conversion tools to make migrating from 
other MTAs to James smooth
+ ----
+ [http://alan.blog-city.com/mailcatcher.htm MailCatcher Mailet Container] - 
Mailet devotee!  My name is [http://alan.blog-city.com/about.htm Alan 
Williamson] and I have been following JAMES for a number of years now, 
particularly the Mailet API.  Being one of the original Servlet guys, the 
design of the Mailet API was a stroke of genius.  I am saddened however at the 
lack of support for this great API.  To address this balance, I created and 
maintain the MailCatcher project which is a lightweight implementation of the 
Mailet API.
  

Reply via email to