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?
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-mail, calendar, shared tasks, etc. eGroupware is pretty nice as well.
Regards, Max
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 which includes e-mail, calendar, shared tasks, etc. eGroupware is pretty nice as well.
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'm responding to. Does horde do it correctly?
mark
m.roth@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'm responding to. Does horde do it correctly?
Sounds to me like a configuration issue somewhere. My installation of Squirrelmail fills in the reply to field with no problems.
Max
Zimbra Collaboration Suite OSE ??? MTA, webmail, LDAP backend, Calendar :)
- ------------ Regards, David -- http://pnyet.web.id
-----Original Message----- From: m.roth@5-cent.us Sender: centos-bounces@centos.org Date: Wed, 26 May 2010 09:57:00 To: CentOS mailing listcentos@centos.org Reply-To: CentOS mailing list centos@centos.org 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 good open source shared calendar systems?
eGroupware and Horde are popular. I use Horde Webmail Edition which includes e-mail, calendar, shared tasks, etc. eGroupware is pretty nice as well.
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'm responding to. Does horde do it correctly?
mark
_______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
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. I use Horde Webmail Edition which includes e-mail, calendar, shared tasks, etc. eGroupware is pretty nice as well.
If horde will work for you, you might want to look at the ClearOS distribution which comes up with Cyrus imap, horde, and ldap working out of the box (and a bunch of other stuff) with a web management interface. I believe you can also get an outlook connector but there is a per-client license fee for that part.
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 what do you want to do, I mean, if you want something to replace Microsoft Exchange maybe you should check one of the above, but if the only thing you want is a Calendar, then WebCalendar is the tool for the job.
[1] http://www.k5n.us/webcalendar.php
Bye, Andres
On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 6:48 PM, Les Mikesell lesmikesell@gmail.com wrote:
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. I use Horde Webmail Edition which includes e-mail, calendar, shared tasks, etc. eGroupware is pretty nice as well.
If horde will work for you, you might want to look at the ClearOS distribution which comes up with Cyrus imap, horde, and ldap working out of the box (and a bunch of other stuff) with a web management interface. I believe you can also get an outlook connector but there is a per-client license fee for that part.
-- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@gmail.com _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 10:07 AM, sync jiannma@gmail.com 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? _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
This thread might be of interest to you: http://www.debian-administration.org/article/How_should_I_allow_mail_calenda...
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:
On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 5:07 AM, sync jiannma@gmail.com 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 Google Apps for Domains? You can get your own gmail/calendar/docs/sites/chat on your own domain.com address for up to 50 people for free. As well as groups/contact sharing/calendar sharing, etc.
I originally tried it out just for testing, but I find it much easier/faster than my managing my own hosting.
Mauriat Miranda wrote:
On Wed, May 26, 2010 at 5:07 AM, sync jiannma@gmail.com 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 Google Apps for Domains? You can get your own gmail/calendar/docs/sites/chat on your own domain.com address for up to 50 people for free. As well as groups/contact sharing/calendar sharing, etc.
I originally tried it out just for testing, but I find it much easier/faster than my managing my own hosting.
I was planning to evaluate devical, but have not tried it yet: http://www.davical.org/
I would welcome comments from anyone with experience with devical.
Here's a feature comparison of several calendar implementation, though it looks a little old, based on the versions listed for the various packages. https://wiki.mozilla.org/Calendar:QA_CalDAV_Support
I know you asked primarily about calendar servers, but I just thought I'd mention the mailserver that I use.
For everything else, I currently run http://www.tummy.com/Products/vpostmaster/ which I like very much. It does not have any kind of calender or contact support, but that can be added seperately. It uses postfix for the underlying mail transport which is very solid and has extensive capability for managing spam attacks and supports many plugins. Vpostmaster implements greylisting, spf checking, spamassasin, clamav, white/black listing. It uses the postgres database. Oh and it also has support for unlimited virtual domains. It includes dovecot pop/imap support and squirrelmail webmail interface.
The GUI is quite user friendly and spam control parameters can be customized on a per user/mailbox basis. It's probably most suitable for small to medium size organizations due to the cost of many features implemented in python, though with postfix as the underlying transport, preliminary spam control features, rbl checks, connection rate limiting etc, can easily be implemented at the postfix level. (If a site has big problems with spam attacks, it is desirable to stop them as early as possible, since running lots of python or perl code on huge amounts of spam can bring a server to its knees.) There is already support in the gui to manage parameters which might be read from the database by postfix or a another plugin.
A basic install can be done by invoking the installation script on a clean install of CentOS in about 3 minutes. I support about 60 mail users running it in a VMware virtual machine.
Nataraj
I
was planning to evaluate devical, but have not tried it yet:
href="http://www.davical.org/" target=_blank
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 installed with 'alien' on CentOS. I think I had to fiddle with some file permissions on CentOS.
It works well, although my brother (who I set it up for) never managed to figure out the calendar permissions.
HTH
On Fri, May 28, 2010 at 6:09 AM, Ian Murray murrayie@yahoo.co.uk wrote:
I
was planning to evaluate devical, but have not tried it yet:
href="http://www.davical.org/" target=_blank
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 installed with 'alien' on CentOS. I think I had to fiddle with some file permissions on CentOS.
It works well, although my brother (who I set it up for) never managed to figure out the calendar permissions.
Yeah ~ That tool is very excellent , by the way , I searched another tool called "Bedework" via the Google . This tool maybe is very useful. Because you can use it to connect the LDAP Server for authenticating the users .
Bedework is an open-source enterprise calendar system that supports public, personal, and group calendaring. It is designed to conform to current calendaring standards with a goal of attaining strong interoperability between other calendaring systems and clients. Bedework is built with an emphasis on higher education, though it is used by many commercial enterprises.
So if the tool can be authenticated the users using the LDAP Server , it maybe very convenient to the enterprise . isn't it ?
HTH
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos
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
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 installed with 'alien' on CentOS. I think I had to fiddle with some file permissions on CentOS.
It works well, although my brother (who I set it up for) never managed to figure out the calendar permissions.
HTH
CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos