hello, I recently had a client that was curious about having a web email server setup on his SUSE server. He was asking about twig. What experiences have the list member had with TWIG - if any?? Would you recommend this or are there other applications that can do a better job at this?? thank you, Oskar
El Sun, 23 Jun 2002 11:04:45 -0500
"pheonix1t"
hello, I recently had a client that was curious about having a web email server setup on his SUSE server. He was asking about twig. What experiences have the list member had with TWIG - if any?? Would you recommend this or are there other applications that can do a better job at this??
There are a lot of webmail servers out there. Twig is a nice one, and includes functionality that competes even with outlook. It have even "variants" with nice additions, like one (not remember the name, twiggy, I think) that works perfectly by wap, in example. There are more choices that do little more than plain mail. IMP was the one included with SuSE eMail Server II, and its good, but is not the easiest to install. Another nice one is Squirrelmail, with a lot of plugins and very easy to get running. The other I tried is a very simple one, nocc, easy to install, easy to run, and may do just what you want. Saludos Gustavo
thank you for the advice!!
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gustavo Muslera"
El Sun, 23 Jun 2002 11:04:45 -0500 "pheonix1t"
escribio: hello, I recently had a client that was curious about having a web email server setup on his SUSE server. He was asking about twig. What experiences have the list member had with TWIG - if any?? Would you recommend this or are there other applications that can do a better job at this??
There are a lot of webmail servers out there. Twig is a nice one, and includes functionality that competes even with outlook. It have even "variants" with nice additions, like one (not remember the name, twiggy, I think) that works perfectly by wap, in example. There are more choices that do little more than plain mail. IMP was the one included with SuSE eMail Server II, and its good, but is not the easiest to install. Another nice one is Squirrelmail, with a lot of plugins and very easy to get running. The other I tried is a very simple one, nocc, easy to install, easy to run, and may do just what you want.
Saludos Gustavo
Hi all, I recently got a Digital camera(Pansonic Lumix).I am able to read the SD card by mounting the camera as sort of a drive.However,I can only do this as root.How can I do this a regular user? Also how do I copy the images from the mounted camera to a new directory? I know these are silly questions but I admit I need help. TIA
On Sunday 23 June 2002 09:44 pm, rob wrote:
Hi all, I recently got a Digital camera(Pansonic Lumix).I am able to read the SD card by mounting the camera as sort of a drive.However,I can only do this as root.How can I do this a regular user? Also how do I copy the images from the mounted camera to a new directory? I know these are silly questions but I admit I need help. TIA OK I got the images from root to regular user.I feel stupid because it was just a drag and drop solution. Still curious as to how to mount the camera as a regular user TIA
* rob (hd522@earthlink.net) [020623 22:44]: ::On Sunday 23 June 2002 09:44 pm, rob wrote: ::> Hi all, ::> I recently got a Digital camera(Pansonic Lumix).I am able to read the ::> SD card by mounting the camera as sort of a drive.However,I can only do ::> this as root.How can I do this a regular user? ::> Also how do I copy the images from the mounted camera to a new directory? ::> I know these are silly questions but I admit I need help. ::> TIA ::OK I got the images from root to regular user.I feel stupid because it was ::just a drag and drop solution. ::Still curious as to how to mount the camera as a regular user Just so you don't have to get to involved. I would setup/install sudo it's on your CD's. After the install you find a file in /etc called sudoers. You can modify it so that as a user you can execute things as root in a one shot type way with sudo. So whatever command you use to execute the job just proceed it by sudo. The line you need to put in /etc/sudoers is like this... <your username> ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD:ALL This way you can do things like say..edit a system file with vi or mount your camera. Something like this... example: sudo vi /etc/passwd Cheers! -=Ben --=====-----=====-- mailto:ben@whack.org --=====-- Tell me what you believe..I tell you what you should see. -DP --=====-----=====--
participants (4)
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Ben Rosenberg
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Gustavo Muslera
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pheonix1t
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rob