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Kolab Project Reaches 1.0

MmmmJoel writes "After months of delays, and on the heels of OpenGroupware.org, version 1.0 of Kolab has finally been released. Commisioned by the German government to develop a Free Software groupware solution, Kolab is the server piece of Kroupware, which will be integrated into the KDE 3.2 desktop. The Kolab KDE Client was released concurrently at 1.0. This release has been announced on Slashdot before, with an initial planned release for December, 2002."

11 comments

  1. Uh oh.. bad name! by zulux · · Score: 2, Informative


    Not just a planet anymore, it's a server!

    (Kolob is the planet(or star) near where God lives according the Church of Jesus Christ of Later Day Saints)

    --

    Moneyed corporations, non-working 'poor' and criminal prisoners are turning productive citizens into tax-slaves.

    1. Re:Uh oh.. bad name! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Better than "evolution" for an e-mail client. You might as well name it "abortion" or "gay marriage."

  2. wow... sounds SUPER Stable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    they call this 1.0?!?!

    and i quote from their site:

    Warning: Remove all of your "traditional" IMAP accounts before trying KMail/Kroupware or use a new $KDEHOME or even better: user. KMail/kroupware will mangle your traditional IMAP folders!
    1. Re:wow... sounds SUPER Stable by Thoguth · · Score: 2, Funny

      That's not a bug, it's just an Exchange compatibility feature.

      --
      The requested URL /iframe/sig.html was not found on this server.
    2. Re:wow... sounds SUPER Stable by d-rock · · Score: 1

      I don't know why they would say that, unless it's part of some special functionality in the KMail client. The server side is built on top of Postfix and Cyrus:
      http://www.kroupware.org/faq/faq.html

      Derek

      --
      Don't Panic...
  3. Packaging is quite odd: RPM's for Debian ! by anon+mouse-cow-aard · · Score: 2, Interesting

    built for debian...
    In the name of distribution neutrality...
    it uses an open package, portable format "OpenPKG", which installs a parallel build environment (it's own gcc, binutils, etc...)
    beside the linux one, packages for OpenPKG are RPM 4 based.
    sounds quite painful to install.

  4. How does it fare? by Deusy · · Score: 1

    In all seriousness (in relation to the above comments) how does Kolab actually perform?

    How well are it's various features implemented?

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