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).
OpenSMTPD is a FREE implementation of the server-side SMTP protocol as
defined by RFC 5321, with some additional standard extensions. It
allows ordinary machines to exchange e-mails with other systems
speaking the SMTP protocol.
This port packages the development snapshots released by OpenSMTPD team.
OpenSMTPD is a FREE implementation of the server-side SMTP protocol as
defined by RFC 5321, with some additional standard extensions. It
allows ordinary machines to exchange e-mails with other systems
speaking the SMTP protocol.
Dovecot is a secure and compact IMAP server which is in the early stages
of development. It supports Maildirs and mbox formats and much of the
IMAP v4 protocol including SSL/TLS. IPv6 support is also included.
Dovecot supports authentication with OpenLDAP, PostgreSQL, MySQL, vpopmail
and PAM.
Archiveopteryx is an Internet mail server, optimised to support
long-term archival storage. It seeks to make it practical not only to
manage large archives, but to use the information therein on a daily
basis instead of relegating it to offline storage.
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.
Archiveopteryx is an Internet mail server, optimised to support
long-term archival storage. It seeks to make it practical not only to
manage large archives, but to use the information therein on a daily
basis instead of relegating it to offline storage.
This is the development version.
Postfix attempts to be fast, easy to administer, and secure, while at the same
time being sendmail compatible enough to not upset existing users. Thus, the
outside has a sendmail-ish flavor, but the inside is completely different.
Some feautures:
Connection cache for SMTP, DSN status notifications, IP version 6, Plug-in
support for multiple SASL implementations (Cyrus, Dovecot), TLS encryption and
authentication, Configurable status notification message text, Access control
per client/sender/recipient/etc, Content filter (built-in, external before
queue, external after queue), Berkeley DB database, LDAP database, MySQL
database, PostgreSQL database, Maildir and mailbox format, Virtual domains,
VERP envelope return addresses and others.
Postfix attempts to be fast, easy to administer, and secure, while at the same
time being sendmail compatible enough to not upset existing users. Thus, the
outside has a sendmail-ish flavor, but the inside is completely different.
Some feautures:
Connection cache for SMTP, DSN status notifications, IP version 6, Plug-in
support for multiple SASL implementations (Cyrus, Dovecot), TLS encryption and
authentication, Configurable status notification message text, Access control
per client/sender/recipient/etc, Content filter (built-in, external before
queue, external after queue), Berkeley DB database, LDAP database, MySQL
database, PostgreSQL database, Maildir and mailbox format, Virtual domains,
VERP envelope return addresses and others.