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| Scalix: Linux Administrator's Guide: Install, configure, and administer your Scalix Collaboration Platform email and groupware server | 
enlarge | Author: Markus Feilner Publisher: Packt Publishing Category: Book
List Price: $39.99 Buy New: $34.99 You Save: $5.00 (13%)
Buy New/Used from $34.99
Avg. Customer Rating:   (3 reviews) Sales Rank: 435838
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 276 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 7.3 x 0.8
ISBN: 1847192769 Dewey Decimal Number: 005 EAN: 9781847192769 ASIN: 1847192769
Publication Date: April 28, 2008 Release Date: April 28, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Install, configure, and administer your Scalix Collaboration Platform email and groupware server. This book is written for Linux administrators who wish to set up an email server for businesses or who wish to switch to Scalix from another email server. Scalix can be used very easily by beginners; however, advanced strategies and administrative tasks are difficult to learn and this book will help you master them all.
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| Customer Reviews:
  Great Buy October 13, 2008 I have this book, and it is a great one. Previously, I spent an awful lot of time, pouring over different texts and progress was sluggish at best. This book gave me a lot of hints and pointed me straight away in the right direction, including backup scripts, updates etc etc. All in all, definitely worth having!
  Poor LDAP integration chapter July 27, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I bought this book for the sake of integrating Scalix with OpenLDAP. Unfortunately, the integration chapter included talks very briefly about this and doesn't even have an example of how to use the most important tool omldapsync with OpenLDAP. I will get back to the Scalix wiki.
  so this is what happened to HP Open Mail May 17, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Some of us remember using HP Open Mail in the early 90s. Very stable, and with the ability to scale up to many users. The book describes its strange journey, and how it morphed into something called Scalix. Perhaps you might agree with Feilner's characterisation of HP's marketing of Open Mail as being defined by a too-close relationship with Microsoft, and a reluctance by HP to position Open Mail as a direct competitor to Exchange. His account of Open Mail's travails is backed up by excerpts from contemporaneous accounts in the technical press.
Anyway, here we are today with Scalix. How does it look? The book describes a sophisticated GUI that lets the sysadmin easily handling managing a large email server. One immediate advantage is that the GUI lets you avoid direct editing of what Feilner calls the "horrible" sendmail syntax of the sendmail configuration files. Good. I was once a sysadmin of unix boxes, and sendmail had the well deserved reputation of being the most complicated package to manage. Its syntax is indeed dreadful, and if you know nothing of this because you use Scalix, you are fortunate.
Another very useful advantage of Scalix over a default sendmail is a more efficient holding of messages. Sendmail sends copies of a message to each recipient's mail file. As far as I know, there is no way with sendmail to avoid this. But Scalix uses a totally different storage approach, that avoids this replication. It lets Scalix scale up to handle more users and messages than sendmail.
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