Oh is it dead??

It used to be THE thing mind you it was the turn of the century that we are talking about! ....looks like I'm a little out of date lol


Personally I haven't played around with Mail Web clients for a while; yeah there is Roundcube or Horde which was quite cool when I ran it in the day.


Like many others have said IMAPssl is the way to go, though I wouldn't expose it to the web. Use a nice VPN system instead. Either a dedicated machine running OpenVPN as an example or a second hand Cisco ASA or any other enterprise equivalent firewall/VPN concentrator that you can pick up for cheap. Even OpenBSD has L2TP vpn built in which works well with Android clients.


Regards,


Kaya


On 9/18/18 11:18 PM, Duncan Guthrie wrote:
Hi,

Please do not recommend SquirrelMail. It is unmaintained. Its last
release was 5 years ago.

User interfaces like Roundcube and Rainloop work well enough and still
are actively maintained. I do not know how well those other ones you
listed work.

Alternatively, direct your users to some clear and well-written
instructions that would allow them to configure a mail client of their
choice.

Best wishes,
Duncan

On 09/08/18 16:39, Kaya Saman wrote:
I agree here!


Basically you would need a few components:


MTA / MDA / MUA


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Message_transfer_agent


One way to do it would be something like: Postfix / Courier IMAP / Then
bolt something like SquirrelMail on top for web UI client


There are many ways to achieve the same goal as in you don't have to use
Postfix you could go for Sendmail or any other....


However for you it might be a better option to go with Linux as @Jay
suggested and then whack something like Scalix or Zimbra on top......


http://www.scalix.com/en/


https://www.zimbra.com/


That way you have a fully managed mail system right out of the box with
granular control of what users can and can't do.....


Regards,


Kaya



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