On Tue, 03 Aug 2004 01:43:36 +0200, Grand Apeiron <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > So if i take your idea this would lead to a webinterface that uses > applications of the Horde framework and calls methodic of the Evolution > API. As i thought further about that, this could lead to an Evolution > webinterface that supports every feature (like MS Exchange or IMAP > Support) thats built into evolution. > Surely this is a target outside the view of my first idea but i will > keep that in mind when creating the webinterface (which should only fit > my personal low needs in the first version ;)).
Right.. I was thinking about something like Outlook web access, that would use e-d-s and therefore not require anything like Exchange, Groupwise or any other collaboration software. I don't know how many people would find this useful; in situations where people are using a collaboration server, that server will almost certainly provide some kind of web access anyway. But for people who just want a nice way to get at their home e-mail and contacts on the road, this could be useful. > Regarding this, it would be interesting to know if there is any hacking > going on regarding a webbased version of Evolution (e.g. something like > MS Outlook Webaccess). I ask because such a webbased interface is > mentioned in the Evolution Project Specification from Jan. 2000 i found > in cvs/evolution/doc/Design. I don't think there is, but I don't know for sure. Also, now that OpenExchange will be open source, it may be worthwhile considering the same idea using parts of that instead. It certainly has a prettier interface than Horde, although it's mostly written in Java, I think, which is a pain for most people to set up. Horde is php, and Apache + mod_php isn't too bad, but Apache + all that Java stuff can get pretty ugly pretty fast. If you want some help with this, let me know; I'd be happy to do some coding. Have fun, Peter _______________________________________________ evolution-hackers maillist - [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.ximian.com/mailman/listinfo/evolution-hackers
