- Cool Yule Tools: 2008 Holiday Gift Guide
- 10 kitchen gadgets for the geek gourmet
- Google admits to violating iPhone development terms
- Smartphone smackdown: Storm vs. iPhone
- Google layoffs: 10,000 jobs being cut
Linux e-mail vendor @Mail Monday released an open source version of its Webmail client and is making it available for free.
The client, @Mail Open, is AJAX-based and works against any e-mail server that supports the IMAP and POP3 e-mail protocols,
including those from Microsoft and IBM/Lotus.
The software, which runs on a Web server, is available now for download.
The company, which has a commercial messaging platform that includes a client, server and appliances, plans to create an open source community around @Mail Open, which it touts as a replacement for clients such as IMP, SquirrelMail, and RoundCube.
"Traditional desktop mail clients are in decline; the future of email is via a web interface," @Mail founder Ben Duncan wrote Monday on the company blog.
The @Mail Open client includes spell check, address book and video mail and is offered under an Apache 2.0 Open Source license. Users also can jump from the free client to the commercial version, which adds calendaring, and a groupware and antivirus module.
"Part of our motivation is to get our brand out in front of people, but also to give back to the open source community," said Corey Bissaillon, vice president of sales and business development for @Mail. "They have provided us these tremendous back-end applications, such as MYSQL and SpamAssassin, and we have been able to unify them with our Web-base administrative interface."
The @Mail Webmail client interface was developed in JavaScript and HTML using PHP and Perl. All source code will be available, according to the company.
Comments (4)
Uh they make it very clear that the whole purpose of the projectBy Anonymous on May 21, 2008, 6:52 amUh they make it very clear that the whole purpose of the project is to provide a LIGHTWEIGHT webmail client that is a breeze to use and just does mail. An address...
Reply | Read entire comment
Lightweight clientBy jimmy on May 20, 2008, 10:25 pmLooks like the open-source version of AtMail is kept lightweight; more of a focus on a Webmail client, vs a groupware/calendaring/everything solution.
Reply | Read entire comment
No calendaringBy Anonymous on May 20, 2008, 11:04 amYou have to pay for calendering etc. This won't fly. One can just install Zimbra and get the full deal or simpy use eGroupware if u only need a web client. Also...
Reply | Read entire comment
Looks good!By Anonymous on May 19, 2008, 8:59 pmThe online demo at: http://demo.atmail.org/ looks impressive - AtMail open is providing a nice lightweight Ajax client!
Reply | Read entire comment
View all comments