I also like horde, but I will say it's not exactly an easy learning
curve for most people. The new dimp client makes things easier, while
losing lots of features.
For simple, and easy to install roundcube is the way to go. If you
want max power from a webmail package, defently horde.
Quoting Spyros Tsiolis stsiol@yahoo.co.uk:
Hi Stan,
i would suggest the (very) powerfull horde bundle of packages. not only webmail but also reminder calendar and and many more.
That's what i am doing these days (trying to make dovecot work with horde that is).
HTH,
s.
--- On Mon, 4/1/10, Stan Hoeppner stan@hardwarefreak.com wrote:
From: Stan Hoeppner stan@hardwarefreak.com Subject: [Dovecot] First time Dovecot user, really impressed so
far. What is best IMAP enabled webmail package to go with Dovecot? To: dovecot@dovecot.org Date: Monday, 4 January, 2010, 23:00 Greetings everyone,I'm new to the list as of today. I just installed Dovecot a couple of days ago for the first time, Debian Lenny Dovecot v1.0.15-2.3. So far I'm pretty impressed. I'm using mbox format with Dovecot auto-deciding to place mail in user home directories, which is great. It works very well with the Win32 Thunderbird 3 client over a small basic 100FDX switched net. I've got one list mail folder with 10,600 messages and server side body searching that folder via T-Bird is very quick, on the order of 5 seconds. It would probably be quicker if Dovecot threaded the search to use both CPUs, but pegging just the one CPU the search is still very darn quick. And this is on a dual P2-550 class machine with only 384MB RAM and a single 500GB 7200RPM SATA drive.
I'd like to install a webmail package on the same host. I used Squirrelmail for this purpose many years ago and I wasn't wholly impressed with the user interface. I'm also not impressed by the fact that I regularly receive spam from compromised Squirrelmail hosts/accounts. I really like the look/feel of the Scalix Web Access AJAX based interface, but I can't/won't use Scalix as it's not supported on Debian, it has more features than I need, and the system requirements are a bit steep.
So, what's the best FOSS IMAP enabled web mail front end with a modern look/feel? I'd like to run it on lighttpd, which I'm already using, not apache.
Thanks in advance for any advice. My apologies if my first post is a little OT, but I figured there's probably no better place to ask about the best webmail front end for Dovecot than here.
-- Stan