How to tell if your web-mail system is any good
| Commercial Web Mail providers | |
|---|---|
| HotMail | No |
| Yahoo Mail | No |
| Gmail | Yes |
| Open Source Web Mail packages | |
| IMP/Horde | No |
| RoundCube | Yes |
| SquirrelMail | Yes |
| Hula | Yes |
Here’s a quick test to see if you web-mail system is any good:
When you first log in, does it show you your mail (your Inbox), or something else? If it shows you something other than your mail, what do they think you were logging in for?
The table to the right shows how the leading commercial and open-source web-mail systems stack up.
However, it may be worth mentioning that this has now been fixed for the new Yahoo Mail in beta.
Russ
Attention Yahoo! = I don't want to read advertising or sign up for another service. I simply want to get to where my mail is and do something with it. Make me happy and I'll pay for your services. Annoy me and I'll avoid or leave yahoo.ca all together.
Add to the frustration that inside of the app, you have to deal with a giant blinking vertical ad in the right-side pane. Good thing Firefox and Camino can both block these ads outright. Surely there's other, less intrusive ways to make money.
"Let a horde application handle authentication" and select IMP as the app in the Setup->Horde->Authentication tab.
The fact that this isn't in their FAQ is kind of strange. Maybe I'll look at their wiki later tonight....
I was running a domain with some partners for a commercial project and got really tired of the default Squirrel Mail setup.
After being pointed to Google's Hosted Mail solution. I signed up my domain for the beta and was accepted into the test program (for up to 6 users on your domain). I needed only 5 for my 4 other partners and it's really working out well!
It's a pay service. And there's no rich-text ... but I get to report (not "just-hit-delete") the spam I get to the ISPs trafficking it.
