What is OpenEMM?
OpenEMM is a feature-rich web-based enterprise application for email
marketing, newsletters and service mails (transaction mails and
event or time triggered mails). OpenEMM offers a great user interface,
sophisticated bounce management, link tracking, lots of graphical
realtime statistics, a CMS module and a scripting feature to implement
individual tasks.
OpenEMM is the first open source application for e-mail marketing.
Its code base has been developed since 1999 and is used - as part
of the commercial software product E-Marketing Manager (EMM) - by
companies like IBM, Daimler, Siemens and Deutsche Telekom.
OpenEMM offers already more than 95% of the functionality of most
commercial products and some features most commercial products do
not offer right now (for example MySQL support and CMS functionality).
OpenEMM is a feature-rich web-based enterprise application for email
marketing, newsletters and service mails (transaction mails and
event or time triggered mails). OpenEMM offers a great user interface,
sophisticated bounce management, link tracking, lots of graphical
realtime statistics, a CMS module and a scripting feature to implement
individual tasks.
OpenEMM is the first open source application for e-mail marketing.
Its code base has been developed since 1999 and is used - as part
of the commercial software product E-Marketing Manager (EMM) - by
companies like IBM, Daimler, Siemens and Deutsche Telekom.
OpenEMM offers already more than 95% of the functionality of most
commercial products and some features most commercial products do
not offer right now (for example MySQL support and CMS functionality).
OpenVISP Stats is a very simple mail statistics RRDtool frontend for mail
statistics that produces daily, weekly, monthly and yearly graphs of
received/sent, bounces/rejected, spam mails, viruses, ... and pop/imap
statistics.
Open WebMail is a webmail system designed to manage very large mail folder
files in a memory efficient way. It also provides a range of features to help
users migrate smoothly from Microsoft Outlook to Open WebMail. Open WebMail
has the following features: multiple languages, multiple iconsets/styles,
strong MIME support, virtual host/login alias, PAM support, online password
changing, convenient folder/message operations, draft folder, confirmed
reading support, full content search, a spelling checker, auto reply, mail
filtering, POP3 support, and message count previewing.
Archivemail searches through mailbox files (in any of a number of
formats) and selects messages older than N days to be moved to a new,
optionally-compressed, mbox-format file. Selected messages can also be
appended to an existing archive file, or simply deleted.
Exim is a mail transfer agent for Unix systems connected to the Internet.
It is a monolithic MTA designed to be a command line compatible drop-in
replacement for Sendmail.
Exim is an excellent mailer for an ISP, as its control and flexibility
are very good and its requeueing and retry algorithms are very powerful.
Exim's configuration syntax is well documented.
pfqueue provides a console (ncurses) interface to Postfix 1, Postfix 2 and
Exim mail queues.
It is a real-time queue scanner that shows per-queue lists of existing
messages; the messages can be deleted, put on hold or released.
For example, it may be useful to inspect a traffic jam at a given time, to see
what is falling into and unexpectedly crowding your deferred queue.
Marcus Alves Grando <mnag@FreeBSD.org>
This Horde library provides rendering drivers for MIME data.
The Horde_ListHeaders library parses Mailing List Headers as defined in
RFC 2369 & RFC 2919.
The Horde_Mail library is a fork of the PEAR Mail library that provides
additional functionality, including (but not limited to):
* Allows a stream to be passed in.
* Allows raw headertext to be used in the outgoing messages (required for
things like message redirection pursuant to RFC 5322 [3.6.6]).
* Native PHP 5 code.
* PHPUnit test suite.
* Provides more comprehensive sendmail error messages.
* Uses Exceptions instead of PEAR_Errors.