Hi,
in Davids last announcement he wrote of the new mailstore code he was writing on and how this would be the basis for a whole lot of stuff we are waiting for, including a native webmail interface.
My proposal is simple: Don't write a webmail interface.
What? You might say, every user and his dog is expecting a webmail interface, so why not have one?
The answer is easy: There are tons of them already in existence, IMP from Horde to name just one.
Those webmail interfaces have had years of development already, are stable and reliable and usually free. They just need a stable and reliable IMAP server in the background, which Mercury will provide. Also, this will give a whole lot of extra features: IMP for example already allows the user to edit filter rules on the server. The imap server just needs to support certain extensions. So, a whole lot of features will come basically for free. (Well, not really, the server side extension will have to be written, but the whole user interface is already there.)
What does the community think of this proposal? Would this be an acceptable way to handle webmail? What do the developers think?
Greetings
Markus
<P>Hi,</P><P>in Davids last announcement he wrote of the new mailstore code he was writing on and how this would be the basis for a whole lot of stuff we are waiting for, including a native webmail interface.</P><P>My proposal is simple: Don't write a webmail interface.</P><P>What? You might say, every user and his dog is expecting a webmail interface, so why not have one?</P><P>The answer is easy: There are tons of them already in existence, IMP from Horde to name just one.</P><P>Those webmail interfaces have had years of development already, are stable and reliable and usually free. They just need a stable and reliable IMAP server in the background, which Mercury will provide. Also, this will give a whole lot of extra features: IMP for example already allows the user to edit filter rules <STRONG>on the server</STRONG>. The imap server just needs to support certain extensions. So, a whole lot of features will come basically for free. (Well, not really, the server side extension will have to be written, but the whole user interface is already there.)</P><P>
</P><P>What does the community think of this proposal? Would this be an acceptable way to handle webmail? What do the developers think?</P><P>
</P><P>Greetings</P><P>Markus</P><P>
</P>