Put the address book in the form of a bunch of mailto links on a web site. Or setup an ldap server with your addresses - that's the standard. On Tue, Jul 31, 2001 at 11:37:15AM -0700, Stephen Carville wrote: > On Tue, 31 Jul 2001, John Leeuw wrote: > > - One of the more simple problems I have encountered is how do you > - support a centralized addressbook with an IMAP implementation. > - Sure you can have shared folders, but those folders can only > - contain email messages. It would be a REAL pain the a** to have > - to setup everyone on the network with their own addressbook and > - have to manage keeping them all up to date. I have since > - discovered that both Mulberry and Eudora have the ability to > - create a centralized addressbook, each using their own unique > - solution. > > I don't now if this works elsewhere but pine creates a shared addres > book for IMAP disguised as an email message. That works for me on my > home server but I only have a few users. LDAP is probably a better > approach for a large user base. > > -- > --Stephen Carville http://www.heronforge.net/~stephen/gnupgkey.txt > ============================================================== > Government is like burning witches: After years of burning young > women failed to solve any of society's problems, the solution was to > burn more young women. > ============================================================== > > > > _______________________________________________ > Seawolf-list mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/seawolf-list -- Jan Carlson janc at kubwa dot com _______________________________________________ Seawolf-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/seawolf-list
