DAS Technology Announces LSP and LMAIL to Migrate from Microsoft to Linux.Business Editors/High-Tech Writers LinuxWorld San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden 2002 NOTE TO MEDIA: Multimedia assets available TAIPEI, Taiwan--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Aug. 5, 2002 Das Technology has just announced LMAIL, a webmail system, to provide migration function to migrate all existing Outlook/Outlook Express mails/addressbook to LMAIL on Linux. LMAIL is a webmail on top of POSTFIX post·fix tr.v. post·fixed, post·fix·ing, post·fix·es To suffix. n. A suffix. post·fix mail server (on Linux). LMAIL also comes with client side software which runs on Windows 98/ME/XP/NT/2000 to extract all existing mails/addressbook, and then transfer them to LMAIL on Linux. This is fantastic news for those who have thousands of mails and hundreds of addresses spreading on several computers. You can now access all your existing mails/addressbook from any browser, anywhere. Please refer to http://das.com.tw/elmail.htm for more news, and visit booth No. 1869 at the upcoming Linuxworld. Das has also integrated LMAIL with its LSP LSP - Label Switched Path , which migrates NT/2000 servers to Linux. LSP can migrate all users, groups, passwords, shared files, permission, web/FTP directories, and IIS (Internet Information Services) Microsoft's Web server. IIS runs under the server versions of Windows, adding HTTP server capability to the Windows operating system. configuration to Linux automatically. It also provides a GUI (Graphical User Interface) A graphics-based user interface that incorporates movable windows, icons and a mouse. The ability to resize application windows and change style and size of fonts are the significant advantages of a GUI vs. a character-based interface. tool very similar to Windows. This GUI tool can even let those who have never used Linux before administer Linux within minutes. ZDNet has a review report on this (http://techupdate.zdnet.com/techupdate/stories/main/ 0,14179,2809945,00.html). (Due to the length of this URL URL in full Uniform Resource Locator Address of a resource on the Internet. The resource can be any type of file stored on a server, such as a Web page, a text file, a graphics file, or an application program. , it may be necessary to copy and paste To copy files from one location to another or to copy text and images from one document to another. All modern operating systems and applications have a copy and paste capability that is typically selected from an Edit menu. See cut and paste and Win Copy between windows. this hyperlink into your Internet browser's URL address field.) As quoted by Michael P. Denigan on www.zdnet.com: "LSP is a good product for performing an NT-to Linux migration...LSP's automated migration process can be a huge time-saver, especially for larger environments with thousands of users; and at a list price of $500, the convenience of LSP is more than worth the price!" Turbolinux has already shipped thousands of their servers with LSP in Mainland China. The integration of LSP and LMAIL can achieve following benefit: 1. Seamless Migration from NT/2000 to Linux While LSP migrate users and passwords to Linux, those NT/2000 administrators do not have to worry about thousands of users/ passwords for mail servers. 2. Quota LSP 3.0 can now configure individual user mailbox A simulated mailbox in the computer that holds e-mail messages. Mailboxes are stored on disk as a file of messages, a database of messages or as an individual file for each message. The standard mailboxes are usually In, Out, Trash and Junk (Spam). quota for LMAIL. 3. Mail Queue Management "Our goal is to make NT/2000 administrators and Windows users migrating to Linux with low cost and minimal learning," said Adam Wu, president of Das Technology. "LMAIL 2.0 will migrate Exchange server!" For more information, please visit www.das.com.tw A Photo is available at URL: http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/photo.cgi?pw.080502/bb3 |
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