Mozilla Lightning to Challenge Outlook 553
MS IE Bug Finder writes "Although Microsoft is dismissing Mozilla Lightning, the article indicates the combination of Thunderbird (mail) with Sunbird (calendaring) should be a worthy opponent against Outlook by the middle of the new year." Reader EvilStein adds a link to the Lightning Q&A.
They missed the boat (Score:2, Funny)
Re:They missed the boat (Score:2)
http://www.shazam.net/ [shazam.net]
Re:They missed the boat (Score:3, Informative)
You just change your MSI package to the updated one and on next boot/login it'll repair itself and in the process the patch will be applied.
It's no different than other third-party software packages.
It's not a worthy opponent (Score:2, Interesting)
I hate Microsoft Windows as much as the next guy, but Outlook has them beat. If only it worked on Linux.
Re:It's not a worthy opponent (Score:4, Informative)
> Sorry, but this time Microsoft wins. Sunbird is not even a complete piece of software. Last time I used it, not all the menu buttons even did anything.
The article said:
> should be a worthy opponent against Outlook by the middle of the new year."
Now... first of all, what was the last time you tried Sunbird? yesterday? 6 months ago?
Then, middle of the new year is kindof like 6 months from now...
I do not know if Sunbird is a good alternative or if it ever will be, but as you can read (or can you? past experience makes this a bit doubtfull) the claim was not that it is a good alternative now, but that it is growing into one and should be there some 6 months from now, so what exactly was your point besides wanting to be dismissive without having an argument?
Re:It's not a worthy opponent (Score:5, Informative)
2. Even if it did not have the features it would have been useable if it did not screw every single other implementation that has. The biggest falling of Sunbird is that it wipes out all fields it does not understand when processing a calendar record. As a result you cannot use it in groupware mode as anything but a read only client (as of last month).
In fact even korganizer is a few years ahead of Sunbird.
Re:It's not a worthy opponent (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:It's not a worthy opponent (Score:3, Informative)
Thunderbird's palm-sync extension works well for many people, though not for all, and I know that several Mozilla calendar developers are interested in synchronization. A fair bit of time during the recent architecture discussions was spent on making sure that we could fit a good sync model -- including transparent offline support, etc. -- into the new calendar system, and I think we've done a dec
Re:It's not a worthy opponent (Score:2, Informative)
I quote:
"As Lightning is still early in the design and prototyping stage, there is no firm availability date yet. The developers of Lightning are currently targetting a first general-user release for the middle of 2005."
From what I remember firefox wasn't that wonderful at a similar stage in its dev cyle but look at where it is now its reached its first release.
Re:It's not a worthy opponent (Score:2, Informative)
What's this about "worthy"? (Score:5, Informative)
Indeed, Sunbird has yet to release its 0.2 version, and has never claimed to be a complete piece of software. The developer resources applied to Sunbird and the Mozilla calendaring components in general have grown materially over the last months, during which we've seen important refactoring work to support multiple calendar protocols, rearchitecture of the UI to handle async networking, implementation of initial CalDAV support, improvements in several pieces of the UI (including, you'll be glad to hear, a rationalization of the menu system), and many other smaller fixes. Attachments, attendee management, a sqlite-based local store for improved performance; I could go on, but it's more interesting to read the checkin logs for yourself, I assure you.
Now, as the Wiki indicates -- would that you could get to it! -- competition with Outlook is not a primary goal of Lightning at this point. To do calendaring in the year 2004 requires that you compete with Outlook in some sense, because they really own that market pretty completely, but knocking off their feature set isn't what we're after here. A lot of people have been asking for Sunbird's calendar capabilities (and more) to be integrated more tightly into the Thunderbird mail interface, and that's what Lightning is all about.
I believe that by the summer of 2005 the Lightning project will have developed software that is useful and interesting to a large enough number of people to warrant releasing it. Do I believe that people will abandon Outlook en masse for Lightning in its first release? Seems unlikely. Do I think that there are some users of Outlook who might rather use Thunderbird+Lightning at that point? I'm pretty sure there are.
Exchange interoperability is obviously a hot topic, and rightly so; IMO it was one of the most significant features of Evolution, and one that we're grateful Novell saw fit to release as open source after the acquisition of Ximian. The new protocol architecture we've been designing and implementing over the last few months should accomodate an exchange-protocol plugin, at least on the calendar side, though nobody has yet stepped up to write it. I have reason to believe that a serious contribution of such a plugin, no doubt based on lessons learned from the Evolution connector's source, would be very warmly received into the calendar tree, and featured prominently in Lightning.
I wish I had a local copy of the wiki's Q&A so that I could post it here, but, alas, I do not.
Mike
Re:It's not a worthy opponent (Score:4, Interesting)
This is the problem with Linux programmers. Many want to reinvent the wheel, instead of trying formulas that are already known to work (see the GIMP vs Photoshop debate on yesterday's story).
See the example of Openoffice.org vs. MS Word. Openoffice was made to replace Microsoft Office. If there were as many Linux clones of windows software, sharing the user interface but not the internals, Linux wouldn't feel as alien as it does for common windows users.
And don't say that copying the user interface would be violating intelectual property. See the precedent in the Apple vs. Microsoft case regarding the GUI named "Windows".
So, why don't people do it? Why won't Linux programmers make "a better Photoshop than Photoshop", or in this case "A better Outlook than Outlook"?
Quoting a sitepoint.com article: "Good designers copy. Great designers steal."
Re:It's not a worthy opponent (Score:4, Funny)
Re:It's not a worthy opponent (Score:2)
Um...you didn't really just type that, did you?
Re:It's not a worthy opponent (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:It's not a worthy opponent (Score:2)
Reality left a vm when you talking to 1998... (Score:4, Insightful)
A single bloated process can use enough resources to effectively bring a machine to a halt, ie. not respond in a timely manner according to a human timescale.
The processor hasn't halted/core dumped/BSODed, but the system is effectively unusable at this point.
So you try to kill the errant process. You Ctrl-Alt-Del, wait for taskmgr to come up. Sometimes it does, sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes it's extremely slow, and you can tell it to kill the process, and sometimes it even listens.
I'm sure eventually it will respond, but you don't have an infinite amount of time to resolve the issue. So you generally shut the machine down as gracefully as possible after waiting a "reasonable" amount of time -- 30 minutes seems fair.
#1. Start-->Shutdown-->logoff
#2. Start-->Shutdown-->Shutdown
#3. (try to kill the explore.exe if taskmgr is responding)
#4. Hold in the power button for 10 seconds, mutter under your breath, and pray it comes back up nicely.
#5. Boot and Uninstall crappy application.
Re:It's not a worthy opponent (Score:3, Interesting)
So here's hoping that Mozilla will make a product as good as Evolution, running equally well on Windows, Mac, and Unix-alike.
Outlook? No way. (Score:3, Insightful)
- Security
- Remote image blocking
- No IE core
- RSS reader
-
Conclusion: Thunderbird rocks.
Lightning? Think about this. (Score:2, Insightful)
- Netscape invented Javascript and HTML e-mail, remember
- Buggy Mozilla core instead of buggy IE core
- Undiscovered bugs in RSS reader
-
Conclusion: Same insecurity, different pile.
Re:Outlook? No way. (Score:5, Insightful)
-no exchange compatability
-no calander sharing
-no contact sharing
-no sharepoint integration
-no office integration
-no PocketPC syncing
Conclusion: My company needs outlook.
If you use more then email then you need outlook, plain and simple. There is no single app that can replace everything that we use outlook for.
This one is harder to switch (Score:4, Insightful)
If it is readily compatible with sync apps for a handheld, etc, I will surely give it a try. However, it still needs the ability to sync wirelessly/over the internet/etc like exchange server can, in order to have a chance on a large scale.
Re: (Score:2)
Not unless it syncs with a PDA... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Not unless it syncs with a PDA... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Not unless it syncs with a PDA... (Score:5, Insightful)
But even then compare what say Evolution offers compared to what Thunderbird offers. See the difference? Thunderbird plus an available addon Calendar which doesn't do half of what Outlook can isn't an Outlook alternative. Its an Outlook Express Alternative that just happens to have a Calendar. Without the back-end server to allow for all of Outlook's features I just don't see the point in calling it an Outlook killer. That's just wishful thinking for people who know nothing about the business world and Outlook/Exchange installs.
I do think that an Email client that allows you to see other peoples calendars and make changes etc would be nice. No doubt basic email and very basic scheduling would be nice to have and find a home in some small offices. But for people who are already using Outlook/Exchange I can't possibly see them dumping that for this solution.
Re:Not unless it syncs with a PDA... (Score:2)
If you can untie businesses from Outlook, then there will be fewer reasons for them to use MS Office (which includes Outlook) instead of OpenOffice.
agree (Score:3, Insightful)
If they get a sync feature running, I'll try it in alpha testing. Heck, I might even file bug reports.
Missing it entirely (Score:5, Insightful)
Not unless it syncs with a PDA
Repeat after me. Calendaring. Calendaring. Calendaring.
Only the execs rally care about syncing to their PDAs/Treos/whatevers, and that CAN be done server side these days. What is much more of a deal-breaker is Outlook's meeting scheduling. Everyone I know in the company here uses it. Everyone in every company I've ever worked at has used Outlook to schedule meetings and confirm people can make it.
I have never understood what is so mind-bendingly complex about it. When I used to use a POP/IMAP client to get my mail, meeting invitations from an Outlook/Exchange user looked to be a set of key/value items, one per line, with all the data necessary for a client (such as Mozilla with the calendaring plugin) to parse it handily, ask the user if they want to add it/see their calendar/whatever, etc.
I honestly think that open-source developers resent Outlook so much, they can't bring themselves to do what those of us trying to use open source in corporate environments have been dying for- interworking with Outlook's meeting notifications and some form of well-integrated calendaring.
Re:Missing it entirely (Score:3, Informative)
Also Needed (Score:3, Insightful)
MS shoud be worried (Score:5, Insightful)
Worry Microsoft! WORRY!
Re:MS shoud be worried (Score:2)
No. Don't worry Microsoft. Your monopoly is secure. All is well. Go back to sleep.
[cue sinister laughter]
don't forget (Score:5, Interesting)
The fix is to provide a seamless migration to a non-exchange server with a calendar-sharing mechanism.
Now that I think of it, when MS was looking to de-throne NetWare, they created a utility that allowed Windows users to see NetWare shares through a single login account on the NetWare box.
This meant that customers could 'upgrade' to Windows and not need to but any more client licenses for Novell.
I wonder if we should find a way to enable calendar browsing via some sort of mechanism that exploits only a single CAL so that uses of the free server side could see Outlook/Exhange calendars without paying CALs for all of the free server users.
Just like the Microsoft mechanism, this needs to be seamless and transparent - to make migration to free software easy and painless.
Re:MS shoud be worried (Score:3, Funny)
To Microsoft:
(Waves hands) This is not the competitor you're looking for....
Re:MS shoud be worried (Score:3, Informative)
From Microsofts Website:
"The Exchange Server 2003 user CAL is required for each user gaining access to the server and entitles access rights to both editions of Exchange Server. Each Exchange Server 2003 CAL also includes Microsoft Office Outlook 2003 or Microsoft Entourage X for Mac and permits access from Microsoft Office Outlook Web Access, Outlook Mobile Access, Exchange Server ActiveSync, or any standard Internet-messaging client."
Outlook/Exchange Integration (Score:4, Insightful)
Although there is the MAPI protocol for communication with Exchange, it appears that you generally need a connector on the client side for non-Outlook clients. That's convenient for the user and administrator, and a strike against third-party email clients currently.
Re:Outlook/Exchange Integration (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Outlook/Exchange Integration (Score:2)
Sorry, maybe I'm being dumb, but what do you mean by this? Doesn't MAPI give you full access to all of Exchange's objects and properties? What else is there?
IMAP (Score:2)
That's what Ximian's first Evolution Connector was based on. It's all IMAP based. Outlook pre-2003 (and maybe post) both use RPCs and MAPI stuff.
Re:Outlook/Exchange Integration (Score:3, Informative)
Client: Novell Connector [novell.com]
If it can connect to exchange.... (Score:2)
Is it going to be able to do that? That would be a great way of gaining a toehold. For instance my previous company (before I joined a rather prominent big-ass software company) would have really benefitted from being able to put a few desktops onto Linux with good Exchange integration - RPC connections, y'know. server-based rules and all that jazz.
Toehold. tha
TNEF. (Score:3, Interesting)
And yes, I know that you can get convertors which take the winmail.dat file and sort it for you, but that's not the best solution.
Evolutions needs to go cross-platform (Score:2, Insightful)
Unless there is going to be a Sunbird server... (Score:5, Insightful)
But the thing that makes the Microsoft offering so strong is not Outlook by itself, but the combination of Outlook and Exchange Server.
You could cobble together an IMAP server and some other OSS pieces and approximate the Outlook/Exchange experience, but since they are not all seamlessly integrated, you would have an administrative nightmare if you ever migrated to another server, found a security hole in one of the pieces, or had to change any piece in any way.
Make Thunderbird and Sunbird (and something that intelligently managed tasks, workflow, and sticky notes) 100% compatible with Exchange. THAT would be an Outlook killer. Though all MS would have to do is break it in the next patch.
Re:Unless there is going to be a Sunbird server... (Score:3, Insightful)
The means that have by which they can force everybody to use a single software product is simple: they don't give them a cho
Shared data stores? (Score:5, Insightful)
There are three components to the holy grail of exchange destroyers:
1. Shared mail store
2. Shared calendaring
3. Shared contacts.
I've got 1 and 2 covered (Courier IMAP and Mozilla calendar with WebDAV backend). There is still no uniform contact database backend... and don't start talking LDAP. LDAP only allows me to read from a directory. People have to be able to add/delete/change records and share entire directories just like in Exchange. *AND* it has to be a cross-platform accessible format so that the I can write a plug-in for any interface (web, mozilla, etc). I was thinking something similar to WebDAV that I use for calendars.
People need their personal contact database and shared db's in their organization to be accessible from anywhere, anytime. I can't believe MS is the only player in this court. Groupwise doesn't count because it's still sucks. Opengroupware and it's clones only work with outlook. The point is to get away entirely from the crushing thumb of MS.
rant over.
Re:Shared data stores? (Score:4, Informative)
Read-write support for LDAP in Mozilla would make me very happy (bookmark storage, contact storage, settings, etc.)
Re:Shared data stores? (Score:2, Informative)
From the experience at my job, shared contacts is not necessary for us at all. Hell half the people don't even use the existing LDAP services.
For us integrating thunderbird and sunbird (while improving the shared calendar via ftp/webDav to be less buggy) would be THE thing.
Being able to add outlook-meeting invites received by email into the calendar would be very nice too.
Re:Shared data stores? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Shared data stores? (Score:3, Informative)
Here is my list of features that would be needed for a true Outlook killer:
1. Shared mail store
2. Shared calendaring
3. Shared contacts
4. Shared Tasks / To Do lists
5. Journal / History
6. Scripting / Database intergration
7. Third Parts Add-ons
1 - 4 have been widely discussed and I will leave them alone.
5 - This feature is widely used by small offices.
Microsoft will probably fight this harder (Score:2)
Not calendar, NOTES (Score:4, Interesting)
Free-form notes, easily sortable and searchable would be a killer app, not another dumb calendar. Maybe a calendar tied in with THAT would make it the ultimate?
Is there any thought (or already some kind of
An IDEA for GNU or other OSS orgs (Score:5, Interesting)
http://add.yahoo.com/fast/help/my/cgi_feedba
Even though I like downloading my email I use yahoo because the convenience of getting to my information anywhere is compelling.
I even pay ( gladly ) for pop access
I would love to use the sunbird client and the other OSS PIM tools in combination with yahoo so that I could download ( and update ) my PIM stuff anywhere.
Even more, I would love to pay GNU or some other OSS org for this rather then paying yahoo.
If GNU or another OSS org implemented this kind of yahoo-like service ( using all OS software ) it would kill 4 birds with one Free(dom) software stone.
1. I get the services I want
2. GNU gets money, which it always needs
3. GNU employs programmers to build an maintain
GNUYahoo ( GNUwho ? ) -- a worthy thing these
days in itself
4. Free(dom) & OS software gets showcased and put
into use.
Almost Geeks have some sort of webmail account and would love to support GNU or another OSS org rather then ________, especially if they implement featurs geeks want like better spam filtering.
If these sites were made user friendly GNU would get a bonus____ giving something to ordinary people that they would like____ which would make GNU, as well as Free(dom) software relevant to their lives.
GNU and OSS especially needs this if they want to fight and win political battles.
Just a thought
Highly unlikely (Score:4, Insightful)
As a side rant I love firefox but thunderbird is a fairly average effort at best. I almost fell off my chair laughing at a post the other day about someone saying how cool and innovative the new sorting and grouping was, features that were available in Outlook 97 (and probably other mail clients at that period). This is another reason why Lightening, same as Chandler is not going to work. Just too far behind the curve and not focussed enough on power deployments.
Re:Highly unlikely (Score:3, Interesting)
During 2004, Thunderbird went from 0.7.x to 1.0, releases which as well as tidying up a lot of residual glitches which were never fixed in Netscape-Mozilla due to the small user-base, added serious new functionality
Release often, build public nightlies, involve the end user in the development/testing/reporting process and you can progress a great deal faster than in a closed testing system where you ha
MS Dismissing? Predictable as clockwork.. (Score:2)
1. MS dismisses competing software.
2. MS starts FUD:ing the software.
3. MS starts copying the functionality of the software.
4. MS touts new features as significant new MS "innovation! Hooray!
It is quite easy to see how successful a specific open source software package is by looking at where Microsoft places it on the "Microsoft attention"-scale.
Similar Sentiments - Microsoft Still Wins (Score:2)
Outlook is tightly integrated with Exchange. If you use Exchange, you won't be switching any time soon (unless you're a sysadmin like me who cares about security... but that's not going to capture my user's attention... no, really... it won't).
Sure, it could replace Outlook Express on home systems with POP/IMAP accounts.
I won't switch to a Mozilla email client until... (Score:2)
I still see Mozilla email search results come back with wacky date sorting like "1/2003, 1/2004, 11/2003, 11/2004". I know it's more code, but you gotta sort dates by date...
PDA Integration and Importing Capability is Key (Score:4, Insightful)
The only problem I've experienced in trying to switch completely to Thunderbird is its inability to import my large (over 1 gig) Outlook PST files. This is on a P4 2.8 rig with a gig of RAM. Perhaps someone can write up an extension to read the PST files directly.
Stab it with our steely knives. (Score:2)
All that IT investment (licenses, training, admin staff) has vaster momentum than any feat
Calendar server (Score:3, Interesting)
Reduce people's dependency on Outlook and it'll become much, much easier to topple Exchange. Topple Exchange and you've got a good chance at completely removing Microsoft from the server room!
A workgroup standard (Score:3, Insightful)
with open standard protocols that support all the things that exchange does.
Email is already taken care of with IMAP4.
We need an open protocol for Calender, Tasks, Journals, Contacts, and all that good stuff.
Then we can have a ton of clients written that can plug into any number of email server.
We are running Exchange 5.5, and upgrading to a newer version is incrediably hard. MS screwed up big time by requiring active directory, and all that jazz to make it work. I don't understand why Exchange can't just run stand-alone or with NT security. All about making people upgrade, probably going to byte them in the but.
I see Evolution as a more mature option (Score:4, Informative)
Killing Outlook (Score:5, Insightful)
Until there is a feature-for-feature (or at least close) drop-in replacement for Exchange people will stick with Outlook. Now I'm not talking about assembling some IMAP/LDAP/SMTP/iCal monster from different parts, rather a true, pre-packaged installer that handles most if not all of the setup and configuration.
Once you liberate the back end server you'll have no problem with the client.
Re:Killing Outlook (Score:3, Interesting)
Outlook 2003 rocks. Period. (Score:4, Insightful)
All incoming emails pop up a small note in the notification area. This note contains the name, subject and a few lines of the email. It will fade and disappear after a few seconds. Before it does I can bring it up, flag it (more about that later) cause it to disappear immediately, or delete it immediately.
All emails can be flagged with different colors with a mouse click. You know how it goes when you are "catching up" on email after lunch or in the morning? You go down through a ton of unimportant messages, see a few that need taken care of and occasionally hit that one that is so important it's worth immediately breaking away from going through your mail. With OL2003 you do your "catch up" with flags. You can blow through the whole list and flag stuff that you need to go back to, red-flag those critical items, maybe blue-flag the personal stuff you'll get to on your lunch hour. You don't have to remember to get back to something or break off from email to handle something before you forget. I've not seen anything else that has this feature and it makes a HUGE difference when you are catching up. When you get something done, you just click the flag and it turns to a check box. At the end of the day you can make a quick glance to the built in search that shows you any orange-flags (for instance) that you left unchecked.
It also integrates with messenger. If you start to send someone an email the moment their name is completed it will check their online status. You may start typing your short email only to notice that the person is online. A quick right click and you're in IM instead of email.
Cleaning up your inbox/outbox? There are tools built in that will let you see "All the old crap that's big or has an attachment" for instance. Sure every email client lets you setup rules or already has one built in that's similar but nothing does it as well.
There are other features that I never think about until I'm stuck on another email client. I was typing something on Lotus Notes (the suck) and without thinking, right clicked a particular word. I was expecting a list of synonyms to come up but no such luck. The polish and attention to detail in OL2003 is unmatched. With many of the other Office 2003 apps I can get by just fine in any other product, Wordperfect, Open Office etc. OL2003 though is head and shoulders above the competition right now. It's the first time in a long time that I can actually say a piece of software has increased my productivity.
Now since I'm paying MS, oops sorry I meant M$, a compliment here it's the law that someone needs to come bash me personally or rant about M$'s evils.... Outlook 2003 is still the shit though.
Re:Outlook 2003 rocks. Period. (Score:3, Insightful)
From: smilin [mailto: http://slashdot.org/~Smilin/]
Sent: Thurday, December 24, 2004 10:29 AM
To: slashdot@slashdot.org
Subject: Re: Re: Outlook 2003 rocks. Period.
"I've seen nothing that works as well
>as Outlook 2003 for managing incoming and
>>outgoing data and communication. I can receive >a constant stream of incoming email and >deal
>>>with it on the fly. No other email client
>works as well."
Hmmm. I guess that not being a mutt user, you
>don't notice
Re:Outlook Lockdown (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Outlook Lockdown (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Outlook Lockdown (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Outlook Lockdown (Score:2, Informative)
It's not pretty but you can for example on any Exchange 2000+ server mount your mailbox as a WebDAV share.
I've run into a few environments where either OWA is turned off and IMAP/POP are not turned on. Whi
Re:Outlook Lockdown (Score:2)
It works... kinda... but alot of handy autocompletion features refuse to work and its slow.
Re:Outlook Lockdown (Score:2)
It's GPL'ed now, right? So why not? Anyone know?
Re:Outlook Lockdown (Score:2)
But, good luck. I have the same problem where im am at. Mostly excuses of why they wont... I gave up trying.
Re:Outlook Lockdown (Score:3, Informative)
There's no reason why Windows-based clones can't talk to Exchange - the MAPI Exchange client is independent of Outlook, IIRC, and the API is reasonably well documented. (Up to about '98, at least - the newer features aren't I think.)
The problem is only on other OSes. As others have mentioned, a few have
Re:Outlook Lockdown (Score:2)
Well the MAPI object model is pretty simple - a mail is just an object in a particular folder with a particlar set of properties. A calendar entry is just an object in with a different set of properties. To send a mail you create an object in the 'outbox' folder.
I'd be surprised if this didn't map very closely to the Exchange wire protocol. If you've got enough of the Exchange protocol in the Mac OS X client to re
Re:Not for much longer.... (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't get what you're saying.
I don't think MS ever claimed it was tightly integrated, did they? There's no reason they can't just strip the app and leave all the underlying APIs and ActiveX objects - in fact they'd be irresponsible if the g
Re:Outlook Lockdown (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:why!? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:why!? (Score:2)
Outlook -- Deadly but Versatile (Score:3, Interesting)
My main clients are architects. They are all heavily dependant on Outlook as their primary project management tool -- email, calendar, etc.
I tried to convince them that Outlook is the world's worst spreader of viral mayhem. They agreed in principle, but were unwilling to give up Outlook. Reason: they're already heavily invested in knowing and using Outlook -- switching would be too much work,
Re:why!? (Score:2)
Re:why!? (Score:2, Informative)
Although of course with it being Microsoft it crashes more often than Holly Hunterin that Cronenberg movie.
Re:why!? (Score:2)
I like receiving an email and creating an appointment/todo with a single click (so to speak).
Outlook XP has never been a security problem for me. The only gripe I have with it is that it's *sloooow*. Even when properly maintaining my PST (regular archiving, etc).
I'm interested in the mozilla calendar project, if it integrates with thunderbird, I'll switch for good. But they are still in the early stages of developement, it s
Re:why!? (Score:3, Informative)
Corporate america is why. When I work I have to be able to send people at diverse locations meeting requests. Outlook lets me connect to their calendar and see when they are free so I do not schedule the meeting at a bad time. It lets me send the request and when people respond it updates everyones schedule to show who has accepted. It let's people suggest an alternative time or location if the o
Re:No way (Score:2)
That's what Thunderbird does.
This is supposed to be a step beyond that one.
And as a home user, I'm certainly willing to check out alternative options.
Re:No way (Score:2)
There's already several out there... (Score:2)
Now, if someone could come up with an Outlook connector (they're working on it, but it's not there yet...) that could connect to Kolab, OpenGroupware, or Open-Xchange, well it'd be a different story altogether.
The
Re:No way (Score:2)
And, I got the pleasure of un-installing Popfile.. good program, but hogs memory needlessly.
Re:No way (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No way (Score:2)
Exactly.
As much as I'd like to eliminate Outlook/Exchange from where I work (primarily because of the cost), until there is something available to integrate these functions into a single mail client, it just isn't going to happen.
I wonder - (Score:4, Interesting)
I suppose we could switch them to a web-based calendar deal but Exchange provides that already with OWA so why go to the bother? Inter-office email rides the VPN so sensitive stuff can be sent without having to teach all the ding-dongs about encryption. In addition, there are some great add-ons for exchange that do some really cool stuff with exchange calendars (team calendar by MS is one).
The other thing about exchange is the centralized storage of email/calendar/contact data. I don't have to worry about backing up 10-20 seperate pst/mbx/dbx/whatever email files. There are automated ways of backing up these files but you might (or might not) be surprised at how often users can fuck that up.
I will grant you this though: for many businesses the genesis of a new exchange installation is due to a new employee who used to work someplace else and simply can't do without it. Even when the $$thousands spent on purchase and implementation would pay for a web solution for years to come. In this much it is psychological.
Re:No way (Score:2)
Replace OE with IE and Lightning with Firefox and ... oh wait ... Firefox is stealing IE's market share really rather quickly.
The hold Microsoft has over the desktop gives them an advantage, that doesn't mean
Re:Firebird : Firefox = Lightning : ?? (Score:2, Funny)
I actually liked (Score:2)
at least with firebird, I was reminded of the Fiery Phoenix [80stees.com] or even better DARK PHOENIX [aol.com]. Or even just the ORIGINAL [hyperdictionary.com] meaning rocked.
Mark Twain quote fits perfectly here... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:why does firefox have no way to launch thunderb (Score:2, Informative)
Re:why does firefox have no way to launch thunderb (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Thunderbird DOES work with Exchange (Score:3, Informative)
IME sysadmins are scared enough of enabling features (esp. on M$ products like Exchange) at the best of times.
Doesn't give you full integration into outlook features like shared calendars either IIRC.