Not only can you change the title, description and logo with a simple form in the admin panel, you can also completely customize the look of the login screen by supplying your own custom stylesheet.
RainLoop sends the user to a plugin example that is nonexistent (which they state will be filled in later), which means the user has to figure out what the process is on their own.
There are 2 different versions of Rainloop. A "community" version is licensed under AGPLv3 allowing it to be integrated with all open source software, while a "standard" version is licensed under the "RainLoop Software License" which is defined here.
RainLoop supports an easy to use client-side OpenPGP encryption. It allows setting up, importing and generating keys from the admin panel. OpenPGP keys are stored in the browser's local storage.
You can't change nothing with free version. Neither add your image logo on login screen. You can't change the templates, can't change the form to send mail.
RainLoop caches messages to allow quicker access to your mailbox and to alleviate the strain put on the server. You can choose to disable it completely if you don't want it. Or, you can configure cache settings such as an additional caching key, browser-level cache, caching message user IDs while searching, etc. Even changing memcache hosts and ports and caching system data is possible.
RainLoop allows attaching files from Dropbox. To enable this feature, go to Dropbox's developer apps page to register your app. You'll receive the app key value to enter in the admin panel.
RainLoop has an easy to use plugin system. You can find the full list of plugins in the admin panel (or see their code on GitHub). From the admin panel, you can, in a simple, user-friendly way, manage them - install, uninstall, update. Unfortunately, a number of plugins and the related documentation, currently, is somewhat lacking.
Unfortunately, all interfaces of roundcube look very old. I hope there will be a progress soon, Google Mail and Outlook Webmail should be the role models here. But also Yahoo mail offers an intuitive design.
If this open source software should survive, it must be completely renewed and bring up to new standards.
Roundcube allows third-party plugins and has a temporary plugin repository (until the official plugin repository comes out of beta) with over a hundred plugins available, covering authentication, improved security and settings among many others categories.
Each contact can have their e-mail address, phone number, location, photos and associated URLs added to them. You can then group contacts and address your mails to the group instead of having to enter each person separately. Additionally, you can import vCards and CSV files as contact information. And, it has LDAP connectors.
Roundcube caches messages to allow quicker access to your mailbox and to alleviate the strain put on the server. You can turn off caching (change 'enable_caching' property in your config/main.inc.php file) if you need messages to appear instantly.
The underlying architecture of Mailpile allows for themes that not only change the visual aesthetic of the client, but layout as well allowing for different UX designs.
The search engine is at the very center of Mailpile. It was specifically designed to be able to handle large amount of e-mails without grinding the machine to a halt.
Additionally, the search includes a tagging feature that can automatically organize new mail by set rules or bayesian classifiers.
Mails can be dragged into a different folder, contacts can be added into group, events in calendars can be tossed around, etc. - all with drag 'n drop.
Open WebMail on your iOS or Android device to get a simplified mobile interface. And when run on iOS, it'll offer you to get iOS profile with settings for mail access, contacts and calendar sync.
Twitter, Facebook, Google and Dropbox are supported. With last two, you can access their file storage; and you can use social account credentials to log into your WebMail acct.
In addition to commercial WebMail Pro, simplified free opensource WebMail Lite is available. Also there are MailSuite Pro (which is basically WebMail Pro integrated with mailserver software) and Aurora, extended with groupware features.
They don't proceed in any logical order, omit significant steps and contain useless stuff like:
"Another critical part of setting up the product is configuring database settings. It's assumed that you already have a database created, fill in the connection details, press Save, then you can Create Tables."
They don't proceed in any logical order, omit significant steps and contain useless crap like:
"Another critical part of setting up the product is configuring database settings. It's assumed that you already have a database created, fill in the connection details, press Save, then you can Create Tables."
This appears to be completely standalone system, only users of PrivMX can send and receive mail from other users with PrivMX. You can't send email to regular @ email addresses, or presumably receive email from them either.
Deploying the application is as simple as running the following commands in your terminal:
git clone
cd isotope-mail/docker/traefik
docker-compose pull && docker-compose up --force-recreate
If you are looking for an alternative to Gmail, look no further than Zimbra. While not a complete document solution it does have some document features as well.
Zimbra doesn't much work with its host platform as much as it brings its own copies of utilities. If you want something small and "plays well with others" integratable...this is not it. Too heavy to run on a RaspberryPi if you're looking for something for just a few users.