Thanks again Mr. X,
I am going to go look at this stuff later on when I am not as tired and
frustrated. After rereading many of the posts made since the Oct. 25th
announcement, I am giving everything one last thought before I blindly
accept it and going back to business as usual. Imail has been an ok
experience for us so far and I haven't been sorry that we've been running it
or buying the SA each year. However this whole thing has forced me to look
around and see what else that is available and what I've been ignoring for a
while now. We need Declude or something like it, SPF and we need to address
some other email issues as well real soon. I just need to decide between the
easy way or the ethical way at this point. Perhaps I was foolish to feel
relieved about tonight's post and that we have an affordable and option
rather than doing the extra work. I also want to know what the majority is
going to do and way that in as well.

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of x
Sent: Monday, November 01, 2004 9:49 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [IMail Forum] A Quick Note from the Ipswitch Executive Team

Ted Galerneau wrote:
> Thanks Mr. X, it's looking better to me as time progresses and I may just
go
> for it and take the time to learn it! I was working on a control panel
> solution for Windows until now, and from what I hear there are tons of
them
> for NIX many which are free. NIX could potentially solve a lot of issues
if
> I could ever feel confident about not being rooted by the bad guys.
> 

I suppose we should take it offlist if it went any further.  However, 
let me state that I honestly don't know why anyone would run anything 
other than a *NIX solution if they had the technical expertise. 
Honestly, Imail is no match for a *NIX solution.  Imail's strength is in 
its ease of use for people that are all windows.

If you are serious about it, dig up some old hardware, install FreeBSD 
on it and follow something like below to get a mail server going:

http://high5.net/howto/

In addition, read a little about IPF rules and turn it on so your server 
isn't wide open to the world.  Then just stay up to date on security 
issues related to what services you do have open to the world (i.e. 
smtp, pop3, imap).

Imail serves a purpose, however, it is far from the best MTA / mailbox 
solution available.  Especially for an ISP and or hosting provider. 
Believe it or not some of the "best" solutions are actually free, they 
just require some technical expertise.

BTW, installing ports on FreeBSD is fairly straight forward.  You can 
literally have postfix (your MTA) up and running in a few commands.

change to the proper ports directory and then make install.

All that being said, I do have customers that require windows only 
products such as Imail and I am waiting to see how they handle this 
whole thing.

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