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Novell To Release Ximian Connector Under GPL
Posted by
timothy
on Tue May 11, 2004 12:03 PM
from the free-software-creeping-in-and-leaping-in dept.
from the free-software-creeping-in-and-leaping-in dept.
ashmodai9 writes "According to this article on LinuxToday.com as well as this press release directly from their site, Novell announced that its "Connector for MS Exchange Server would be integrated into Evolution 2.0 and made available as open source, beginning today with the current Connector 1.4." Apparently, downloads will be available for the current version of Evolution starting May 14th."
Thanks to reader crafterm, a snippet from Novell's Connector website: "With the Connector for Microsoft Exchange installed, Evolution functions as an Exchange client, enabling users to become full participants in company-wide group scheduling and other collaborative tasks. Linux and Solaris users can access public folders, Global Address Lists, email, calendar, task lists, and group scheduling information." Update: 05/11 17:58 GMT by T :
In related news, ChiralSoftware writes "Codeweavers' long-awaited sequel to Crossover 2.1 is here. Just like the old version, the new version lets you install MS Office on Linux desktops. The new version adds support for Outlook XP, Lotus Notes and Microsoft Project."
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Apache? (Score:4, Interesting)
Don't wait until the 14th. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Don't wait until the 14th. (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Don't wait until the 14th. (Score:5, Insightful)
The biggest thing that MS won't like about this, however, isn't the loss of a few seat licenses but that it opens up an avenue for migrating to Linux. You can convert piecemeal rather than having to switch everything at once.
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Excellent news for the FOSS community! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Excellent news for the FOSS community! (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Excellent news for the FOSS community! (Score:5, Interesting)
Sorry, but no. First, this 'exchange connector' depends on Outlook web access, so it is not TRULY an Exchange connector. It is more an exchange translator. Second by requiring Outlook web they will cause more sites (not less) to run Iis (internet information server) The only thing worse than a site running exchange (as an MCSE I know) is a site running exchange with Outlook Web enabled. They get all the power of exchange viruses coupled with the ease of IIS viruses for an optimal user experience Sarcasm I hope that they are pursuing a true Exchange connector.
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Re:Excellent news for the FOSS community! (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Excellent news for the FOSS community! (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Excellent news for the FOSS community! (Score:5, Informative)
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Yay! (Score:5, Interesting)
Now I just have to convince our NT admin staff to turn on Outlook Web Access...
You should still purchase it! (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, remember you'll likely be buying some support which is cheaper than going it alone.
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custom contacts form and categories? (Score:4, Interesting)
And what about categories? In Windows you have to add them to the registry - there is no such thing in Linux.
Great News (Score:5, Interesting)
Wonderful News (Score:5, Interesting)
This is just one less hurdle to overcome. I aplaud Novel's decision.
Wonderful, wonderful - alll we need is a server... (Score:5, Insightful)
The promise of exchange - integrated email & calendaring, locks a lot of companies in to MS software.
Say what you will, the ability for a clueless end-user to click "accept" on an email and automatically schedule themselves for a meeting is a Big Deal(tm).
Now, if only we had something affordable that could do that on the Linux server side, with clients on Linux, Windows and Mac platforms...and no, webmail doesn't cut it...
Is there anyone working on this?
-Steve
Re:Wonderful, wonderful - alll we need is a server (Score:5, Interesting)
Specially if you use something like Mono (plug, plug, plug, plug).
Love,
Miguel
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Re:Wonderful, wonderful - alll we need is a server (Score:5, Interesting)
Sounds doable. I'm a developer on the Citadel [citadel.org] project, which has an open source groupware server. Now that the Connector is open source, we might give some serious consideration towards implementing the required WebDAV API in our web service.
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Re:Wonderful, wonderful - alll we need is a server (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't consider myself clueless and it's a Big Deal(tm) for me.
I don't get paid for managing my calendar and I don't want to waste my time managing my calendar. If someone or something will do it for me or make my life easier, then all the better.
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Cue Irrelevant Feature Complaints In.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Okay, you have your connector for MS Exchange right there in the main app now. NOW what's stopping you from seriously considering OSS as a possibility? And, I'm not talking about the 1.2% of the population that needs some bizarre, esoteric feature in Outlook or Word or whatever that 98.8% of the rest of the population didn't even know exists.
Seriously, folks. Linux ain't ready for the home desktop market, but it's high time more people start considering its viability for the desktop in the workplace, especially as lightweight replacements for Wintops that don't do all that much more than word processing and scheduling.
Take most of that money you've been blowing on MCSEs and A/V software, and pay a few competent *nix admins to come in and properly set up the systems, and you just may well alleviate some, or most, of that downtime. How much TCO did YOUR company have to add to Windows from Sasser, anyway?
Re:Cue Irrelevant Feature Complaints In.... (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Cue Irrelevant Feature Complaints In.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Uh. So fire the receptionist and hire a competent one? It's called internal training. You should have a budget for it. There's no reason your receptionist needs to "learn Linux". You give her the apps, you give her the introduction, and you give her some time to settle into it, and that's that.
I'm sick of hearing that people need to "learn Linux" to migrate in the workspace. Hello? I'm surrounded by 350 co-workers and I think maybe 2 of them, not counting our meager IT staff, actually "knows Windows" but they still manage to do their jobs. The nice thing about "knowing Linux", however, is that if you're a competent admin you can make sure that the people who don't "know Linux" can't shoot their own toes off, or, at least, can't shoot anyone else. See, with Windows, not only can you shoot your own toes off if you don't "know Windows", but you can shoot everyone else in the general vicinity, and, on occasion, it just arbitrarily decides to shoot you even if you didn't do anything wrong.
I don't want to hear any crap about migration costs. Proof. Give me proof. Give me case studies. I'm tired of excuses. Maybe they're true, but they're always just excuses. It's just people afraid of a new thing and nothing more.
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Re:Cue Irrelevant Feature Complaints In.... (Score:5, Insightful)
So, the problem with Linux is that your company is too cheap to hire a competent receptionist who can learn the basics of very similar software packages in-house in a reasonable amount of time? For your general word processing and spreadsheeting applications, Open Office isn't really that much different. If she can learn to blindly click buttons on Office, there's no reason she can't learn to do it on Open Office. If that were really true, we'd all still be using WordPerfect.
You can even train a mouse to do rudimentary, repetitive tasks. Just how much dumber are your receptionists?
On top of that, I can't imagine that the cost difference of hiring new receptionists, especially from a temp agency, are going to offset productivity gains and cost savings for the rest of the company if Linux is a viable consideration otherwise. If it does, maybe you need to consider firing your HR group and getting people who don't just knee-jerk hire every receptionist that walks in the door...
You're just making exuses. You must be a manager.
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Paging Steve Jobs! (Score:5, Interesting)
Awesome (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm a full-time desktop Linux user, and not just for coding, but for every aspect of business, so all this stuff matters to me. This week is going to be a great week in Desktop Linux: Suse 9.1 and Crossover 3 are both coming out at about the same time, and both are huge improvements over what came before.
-------
WAP news [chiralsoftware.net]
Good for KDE folks, too (Score:5, Interesting)
Novell, you seriously rock. I know you're doing this for business reasons, but you just bought a lood of goodwill from a bunch of folks in IT departments. Thank you!
OT harp: Now, if KMail would just add IMAP filtering... ;-)
Re:Good for KDE folks, too (Score:5, Informative)
From the KDE 3.3 Release Plan [kde.org]:
Redesign filters to use Sieve internally. Allow editing of Sieve scripts on IMAP servers to get rid of the bug reports a la "KMail doesn't support IMAP folders for fitering"
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Cached Mode? (Score:4, Informative)
One is cached mode - no more online/offline dicking around - it really works *well*. I have not had any screwy problems as of yet. (Basically Outlook caches your email - a seamless synchronization of your folders and it automatically detects a connected state)
The other thing is the RPC over HTTP - so I can get full exchange functionality over the internet, just as if I was using IMAP or POP standards, but with the full exchange server deal: contacts, calendars etc. It's really been handy - no opening VPN connections or using webmail to check my work mail on my laptop.
Are these two features available with Novell's solution? Even if they aren't I'm sure they will be. And having the option is great for the future even though, we are on the MS road for the time being. But for now, Exchange 2003 has worked very well, certainly better than our Linux pilot (Debian/FetchMail/Exim etc. with Thunderbird) - but our Linux pilot was kneecapped by having to operate in a mixed environment (which these new connectors would fix), and obviously going with Exchange cost us a whole lot more money! (Like $20K or thereabouts instead of free - consulting and hardware fees would've been required in both cases - and the Linux consulting was a lot cheaper believe it or not)
Re:Cached Mode? (Score:5, Interesting)
Virtual folders have been in Evolution forever. I have the same thing set up in Evolution and was shocked when I installed Outlook 2003 and they had it too. I think the interface is BUSY though. I hate the bars that break stuff out by date... it is distracting. The other stuff is interesting (but I have it in Evolution).
I don't know everything that the connector adds, but I am glad to get it... hopefully soon.
This isn't to say that Evolution doesn't have its rough edges. It DOES... but it is amazing for how relatively young it is. I have been using Outlook for years and it only recently got to be very usable. Evolution is a lot further in a shorter amount of time (love the RSS feed aggregator that is built in).
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Silliness (Score:5, Insightful)
Makes me glad I don't have Novell stock. GroupWise earns them money. This does what?
Re:Silliness (Score:5, Insightful)
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Thank you, Novell (Score:5, Interesting)
I can actually use my Linux box at work, without relying on my Windows box.
In my particular company, we use Exchange. While I *have* been able to get IE working with Wine, I haven't had any luck with Outlook at all - I need it for its calendar, which everyone else uses. With Evolution plus the connector, I can now throw away my old dusty NT box for good!
We've needed this for a long time, and I am very grateful for this.
Open SUSE and the new Distro scenario (Score:5, Interesting)
The big picture for commercial distros a couple years back was:
With RedHat going Fedora (and resigning its mindshare), it wasn't clear what the new scenario sould be. Mandrake was in my mind the great candidate to be the king of the overall distro (from freelading and home users through enterprise solutions), assuming they released more stable corporate versions.
Mandrake did its homework, and they announced a new development strategy with a community release and a later, more stable official release. They probably should add a slower (once a year) corporate option
But now Novell buys SUSE, opens it up and kicks the hell out of the Chess board. RedHat backs up and announces their (late) return to the desktop. Things are getting hot my friends :-)
One more step, a Win32 port of Evolution (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:One more step, a Win32 port of Evolution (Score:5, Informative)
I imaging the reference to WIMP is the WIMP-GTK [sourceforge.net] theme for GTK-on-Windows that mirrors the look of Windows.
This is how Gaim [sourceforge.net] handles their Windows "port" (thought I don't think "port" is really the rigtht word.
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Want to thank Novell? BUY from them! (Score:5, Insightful)
BUY something from SuSE, Ximian or Novell!
Exchange Server alternatives or better options? (Score:5, Interesting)
BUT here's the obvious question: When will there be a viable challenger to Exchange Server? Am I missing something big? Last time I looked, most of the messaging solutions were missing a decent calendaring/schedule solution. Oracle's Collaboration Server is so involved/overkill (9cds for a basic install, iirc) that it's out of reach for most small/med orgs, and makes Notes look svelte. Groupwise was pretty obtuse & closed when I last looked. Open Groupware looks interesting (especially with the knoppix-ogo distro), but feels like Openoffice build 635... i.e. not fully baked.
When is a project going to come up with messaging, calendaring (via ical, mapi, etc etc), a repository that isn't as horrid as exchange public folders (maybe something modeled after/improving upon Opentext's Livelink), flexible event notifications (maybe simple stuff like alerts via email/SMS???). I have hopes for IBM's recent office tools announcement, but we'll see. A turnaround for Groupwise? Maybe? Options, I want options, dammit!
-Jon
Yast open sourced and now Ximian Connector? (Score:5, Insightful)
About time.
How long till they open source NetWare and eDirectory?
CrossOver Office 3.0 now supports Notes 6.5.1 (Score:5, Informative)
CodeWeaver is happy to announce that today we have shipped version 3.0 of CrossOver Office.
We've added new, official, support for Outlook XP, Microsoft Project, and Notes 6.5.1. Unofficially, we're excited by users comments that far more applications are working now. These include programs like Framemaker and Microsoft Money. You can see the full list of changes here:
http://www.codeweavers.com/site/products/cxoffice
Further, this version marks some fairly ubstantial changes in our CrossOver Product line. First, we have merged the CrossOver Plugin product into the CrossOver Office product offering, so now all non server versions of CrossOver automatically provide
the Plugin functionality.
No excuses for IT now? (Score:5, Interesting)
For a basic office computer, there is now no excuse for IT to not use Linux, unless there is a specific Windows-only app that is needed.
Linux has any terminal you ever needed, OO.org, and now is fully Exchange-server compatable?
And it's all free?
The only thing that could possibly make your Linux TCO high now is perhaps re-training your tech staff who have undoubtedly been brought up on MS Windows if they went to college in the US, and that's not terribly expensive in the long run...
Why won't you support Linux companies? (Score:5, Insightful)
Coming soon from Microsoft... (Score:5, Troll)
Re:Apache? (Score:5, Funny)
It does, it is just mislabled as "main".
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Re:Novell owns Evolution?? (Score:4, Informative)
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Re:That's great news! (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Macs. (Score:4, Informative)
To complete it, just build yourself a Connector package.
It's been tested internally at Ximian and Novell in the past, although it was determined it wouldn't be worthwhile to release it as a product. But now that it's free, you can do it.
a.
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Re:Novell is really serious (Score:5, Insightful)
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Indeed: havoc in redmond (Score:5, Interesting)
This is THE single big reason to NOT switch away from Windows in Office Automation. THE. Wow.
I cannot believe, there are not 10.000 alarm bells ringing in redmond right now.
Notice the tarball already avail in source?
Notice how SOON it will be officially? This looks like a planned hit and run to me.
Prediction: Either MS treatens them and they pull it. But the source is out so -pbbbt-. Or expect the next big free software suit to arrive. And it will be pulled, but the source is out so -pbbbt-
If, on the other hand, MS plays nice about this, well, hell just froze over again.
"/Dread"
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Re:Indeed: havoc in redmond (Score:5, Informative)
Ximian Connector has been listed on Microsoft's website for a long time as a partner product, so they have no reason be suprised. Connector uses APIs which MS built in for the explicit purpose of interoperatbility.
Be clear on one thing (bolded for emphisis): In order to use Ximian Connector, you need to buy an Exchange CAL and a Windows CAL.
MS gets paid whether you are using Outlook or not -- in fact they get paid more because Unix cilents aren't using a free IMAP server or something.
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Re:I wonder what MS will think of this (Score:5, Interesting)
1) OpenOffice.org is available for several platforms.
2) Ximian is working on putting Evolution integration into OpenOffice.org.
3) Ximian is porting Evolution 2.0 to Windows.
4) ???
4) I think that "Profit!" fits in here somewhere.
Nevertheless, it may be a very good strategy to begin to pull away the strict dependance upon MS Office and Outlook/Exchange. Microsoft still charges Exchange server "seat licenses", but this is just one small step that may very well make a significant impact, especially when MS Office itself is taken out of the equation, and can be replaced with OO.o and Evolution.
Novell is getting to be pretty crafty. Maybe we need to give them a bit more credit?
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