On Mon, 23 Nov 2009, vuser1@test123.ru wrote:
Outlook is best email client. Even 2003. The only missing thing is inability to do imap-search request directly to imap server.
I won't say Outlook is the worst email client I've ever seen, but we all know that 'best' and 'Outlook' can only be in one sentence if it is accompanied by 'alternative to'... Outlook 2007 is better than 2003, for example with non-ascii text. With 2003, it's not possible to use a unicode pst for IMAP, so emails in (iirc) koi8-r are stored in the pst as all questionmarks. Forwarding them or saving them to another folder also forwards those changes to the IMAP server, effectively ruining the message. With Outlook 2007 things have improved, but it's still a mess.
This FTS issue _may_be_ the problem in environment where users have not primary workstation. And thanks to Jerry for pointing another issue - problem if user logs in another workstation without logging out from first.
Well, that part has been tackled by having the pst on a samba share: outlook simply won't open if you're still running it on another computer because then the PST is locked... To me, that sounds like a better solution than having multiple PSTs all with their own subset of the owner's emails.
I tried to migrate to another clients several times. In the long run Outlook is the best. Even for IMAP. It does not handle IMAP perfectly, but quite well. It works OK with dovecot-imapd. If you are on Windows and you have MSOffice, Outlook is the answer.
If you are on Windows, have MSOffice, don't need to administer lots of computers, and email in only one US-ASCII or ISO-LATIN1 supported language, then you might want to consider using Outlook. I've seen too many of my clients ordering me to install Outlook and then running in all kinds of trouble. Even as far as some changing to Squirrelmail because that at least enabled them to communicate with their colleagues in Russia etc. So Outlook is an answer only if you're prepared to face the consequences.
-- Maarten