On Thu, Jun 3, 2010 at 3:44 PM, Paul Bijnens wrote:
> On 2010-06-03 05:21, sync wrote:
> > I recently switched to using Thunderbird for my email and installed the
> > Lightning calendar add-on. Now all I need is a remote calendar server.
> > I just need a simple server to support a few personal c
On 2010-06-03 05:21, sync wrote:
> I recently switched to using Thunderbird for my email and installed the
> Lightning calendar add-on. Now all I need is a remote calendar server.
> I just need a simple server to support a few personal calendars and a
>
> shared calendar. Any recommendation
On 03/06/10 13:21, sync wrote:
> Hi ,all :
>
> I recently switched to using Thunderbird for my email and installed the
> Lightning calendar add-on. Now all I need is a remote calendar server.
> I just need a simple server to support a few personal calendars and a
> shared calendar. Any recommen
2010/6/3 sync :
> Hi ,all :
>
> I recently switched to using Thunderbird for my email and installed the
> Lightning calendar add-on. Now all I need is a remote calendar server.
> I just need a simple server to support a few personal calendars and a
>
> shared calendar. Any recommendations for a
Hi,
im using zarafa, its like exchange server.
http://www.zarafa.com/content/community
bye
On 28.5.2010 0:09, Ian Murray wrote:
>
> I
>
>> was planning to evaluate devical, but have not tried it yet:
>>
>
>> href="http://www.davical.org/"; target=_blank
>>
>>> http://www.dav
On Fri, May 28, 2010 at 6:09 AM, Ian Murray wrote:
>
>
> I
> > was planning to evaluate devical, but have not tried it yet:
>
> > href="http://www.davical.org/"; target=_blank
> > >http://www.davical.org/
>
> I would welcome comments from anyone with
> > experience with devical.
>
> DAViCal is ex
I
> was planning to evaluate devical, but have not tried it yet:
> href="http://www.davical.org/"; target=_blank
> >http://www.davical.org/
I would welcome comments from anyone with
> experience with devical.
DAViCal is excellent. Perhaps more at home on a Debian based disty, but can be
in
sync wrote:
> Thanks for all suggestions ~ ^-^
So, don't leave us hanging by suspenders, tell us what you've decided on!
mark
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Thanks for all suggestions ~ ^-^
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Mauriat Miranda wrote:
> On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 5:07 AM, sync wrote:
>
>> Hello,guys:
>>
>> I've seen several suggestions for alternatives to exchange for mail,
>> which I will be trying.
>>
>> My question is, does anyone know of any good open source shared calendar
>> systems?
>>
>
> I k
On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 5:07 AM, sync wrote:
> Hello,guys:
>
> I've seen several suggestions for alternatives to exchange for mail,
> which I will be trying.
>
> My question is, does anyone know of any good open source shared calendar
> systems?
I know its not open source, but have you considered
Hi,
I think that maybe Zimbra, ClearOS, eGroupware, Zarafa or Horde are a
little too much if the only thing you want is to have the calendar.
Maybe you should check WebCalendar [1]; its pretty good, allowing you
to sync it with iCal/RSS, and a bunch of other things.
Of course it all depends on wh
On 5/26/2010 8:25 AM, Max Hetrick wrote:
> sync wrote:
>> Hello,guys:
>>
>> I've seen several suggestions for alternatives to exchange for mail,
>> which I will be trying.
>>
>> My question is, does anyone know of any good open source shared calendar
>> systems?
>
> eGroupware and Horde are popular
On 05/26/2010 10:07 AM, sync wrote:
> Hello,guys:
>
> I've seen several suggestions for alternatives to exchange for mail,
> which I will be trying.
> My question is, does anyone know of any good open source shared calendar
> systems?
>
Take a look at Zafara:
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Feature
On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 10:07 AM, sync wrote:
> Hello,guys:
>
> I've seen several suggestions for alternatives to exchange for mail,
> which I will be trying.
>
> My question is, does anyone know of any good open source shared calendar
> systems?
> ___
>
list
Subject: Re: [CentOS] Calendar server software suggestions
Max wrote:
> sync wrote:
>> Hello,guys:
>>
>> I've seen several suggestions for alternatives to exchange for mail,
>> which I will be trying.
>>
>> My question is, does anyone know of any
m.r...@5-cent.us wrote:
> On a related note, since you're a horde user: my ISP that I have my domain
> hosted on offers roundcube, squirrelmail, and horde. What I don't like
> about squirrelmail is that it does *not* do the right thing on a reply: I
> have to manually put in who wrote the email I'
Max wrote:
> sync wrote:
>> Hello,guys:
>>
>> I've seen several suggestions for alternatives to exchange for mail,
>> which I will be trying.
>>
>> My question is, does anyone know of any good open source shared calendar
>> systems?
>
> eGroupware and Horde are popular. I use Horde Webmail Edition
sync wrote:
> Hello,guys:
>
> I've seen several suggestions for alternatives to exchange for mail,
> which I will be trying.
>
> My question is, does anyone know of any good open source shared calendar
> systems?
eGroupware and Horde are popular. I use Horde Webmail Edition which
includes e-mai
on 5-13-2009 6:35 AM Max Hetrick spake the following:
> Scott Silva wrote:
>
>> As for IMAP access, Horde is fine. It will also work with other backends like
>> Kolab if you so choose. I also didn't want to use Zimbra because I run my own
>> spam and virus scanning, and I didn't want to "downgrade
Scott Silva wrote:
> As for IMAP access, Horde is fine. It will also work with other backends like
> Kolab if you so choose. I also didn't want to use Zimbra because I run my own
> spam and virus scanning, and I didn't want to "downgrade" to what Zimbra
> thinks works. And Horde has been around fo
Bowie Bailey wrote:
> I recently switched to using Thunderbird for my email and installed the
> Lightning calendar add-on. Now all I need is a remote calendar server.
> I just need a simple server to support a few personal calendars and a
> shared calendar. Any recommendations for a CentOS /
Scott Silva wrote:
> Most of my users seem OK with it. I was running it side by side with roundcube
> as a test, and most users seem to like the extra bits. Besides, horde keeps
> compatibility with less than brand new PHP versions, but Roundcube insists you
> have the newest PHP installed everyti
Scott Silva wrote:
> on 5-12-2009 4:24 AM Max Hetrick spake the following:
>> Scott Silva wrote:
>>
>>> [...]
>>
>> I had looked at Horde some time ago, but brushed it off. I think I'll
>> check it out though again and get it up and running.
>>
>> Thanks!
>> Max
> Most of my users seem OK with it.
on 5-12-2009 4:24 AM Max Hetrick spake the following:
> Scott Silva wrote:
>
>> I actually used the tarball from the horde site. If you untar it under your
>> webroot, it is pretty easy. I have it authing through imp, which auths
>> through
>> IMAP from my local users. It was a lot easier then th
Scott Silva wrote:
> I actually used the tarball from the horde site. If you untar it under your
> webroot, it is pretty easy. I have it authing through imp, which auths through
> IMAP from my local users. It was a lot easier then the rpm's in the extra, but
> you can't beat the ease of just "yum
On Mon, 2009-05-11 at 17:31 -0400, Max Hetrick wrote:
> Scott Silva wrote:
>
> > Do you think you might want webmail also? If so, the Horde apps from the
> > extras repo will do it for you.
>
> Hi, Scott,
>
> I've been "evaluating" Zimbra for a bit now, as it seemed that
> configuration and set
on 5-11-2009 2:31 PM Max Hetrick spake the following:
> Scott Silva wrote:
>
>> Do you think you might want webmail also? If so, the Horde apps from the
>> extras repo will do it for you.
>
> Hi, Scott,
>
> I've been "evaluating" Zimbra for a bit now, as it seemed that
> configuration and set u
Scott Silva wrote:
> Do you think you might want webmail also? If so, the Horde apps from the
> extras repo will do it for you.
Hi, Scott,
I've been "evaluating" Zimbra for a bit now, as it seemed that
configuration and set up of Horde was kind of complicating. I wasn't
aware that it was in th
Scott Silva wrote:
> on 5-11-2009 8:09 AM Bowie Bailey spake the following:
>
>> I recently switched to using Thunderbird for my email and installed the
>> Lightning calendar add-on. Now all I need is a remote calendar server.
>> I just need a simple server to support a few personal calendar
on 5-11-2009 8:09 AM Bowie Bailey spake the following:
> I recently switched to using Thunderbird for my email and installed the
> Lightning calendar add-on. Now all I need is a remote calendar server.
> I just need a simple server to support a few personal calendars and a
> shared calendar.
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