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Ipswitch Collaboration Suite

22 Feb 2005 12:07


A serious lack of integration puts this messaging suite at the bottom of the pile.

Problems start with the install, which is done on a server running Windows 2000. The procedure starts well enough, but the setup program spawns separate installation routines for each of the component products, some of which began before the previous install had ended on our server. You then have to contend with different management interfaces for the mail server, WorkgroupShare and instant messaging components. Also, you need to install separate clients to use the WorkgroupShare and instant messaging services.

In its defence, the IMail server supports both POP3 and IMAP4 access and is easy enough to manage, with the option to use an external ODBC database rather than an internal user store if preferred. An LDAP server, list server and browser-based email client also come as standard. Basic Web-based administration is another option, and Web users get their own calendaring tool, although calendar sharing isn’t supported this way and the browser interface is very basic and unlikely to win many converts.

On the plus side, Microsoft’s Outlook client can be used both to send and receive mail via the IMail server and collaboration features added by installing the WorkgroupShare client. This works well enough, with background synchronisation to update the contents of shared address books, calendars, tasks and notes folders. However, each client has to be configured individually and users can’t share folders themselves without getting an administrator to configure the rights.

On the security front the antivirus scanner does a decent enough job, but the anti-spam tools don’t measure up to those of the competition. And that despite the inclusion of a Bayesian filter alongside support for real-time blackhole services.

In principle, the Ipswitch Collaboration Suite ticks the right boxes to fit it for duty as an Exchange alternative in a small business. However, in practice this first release is little more than a bundling of existing products that need to be more fully integrated if they are to challenge the competition.

Story URL: http://reviews.zdnet.co.uk/software/enterpriseapplications/0,1000001813,39188635,00.htm

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