I have to support Marc?s question. And also - what makes HomeBox different from
Mailcow (https://mailcow.email/)?
Thanks, Joachim
-----Urspr?ngliche Nachricht-----
Von: dovecot <dovecot-bounces at dovecot.org> Im Auftrag von Marc
Gesendet: Dienstag, 27. Dezember 2022 11:25
An: Andre Rodier <andre at rodier.me>; dovecot at dovecot.org;
postfix-users at postfix.org; debian-user at lists.debian.org; users-request at
sogo.nu
Betreff: RE: Self hosting solution for Christmas
>
> Here my present for Christmas: a new version of HomeBox, the self
> hosted email solution.
>
> Feel free to drop comments, create issues, update the docs, etc.
>
> I released this quickly before going on vacation, so you may find some
> issues. However, this is mostly stable, and the code is easy to modify.
>
That is why one should not be interested to much risk of lacking future support.
What if your wife gets pregnant and there is no update/release for 9 months? ;)
Obviously I admire such open source efforts.
It is just such a pity to see so many projects initiated seemingly without first
trying to bundle forces. This is especially visible in crm all these individual
projects are 'shitty', I do not get why none of them try and work
together to create a few good ones.
I used to always state that there is only one real distribution you could use,
and that is the centos one. Basically because you could always buy a redhat
license and get the support of a billion dollar company (now even IBM), but with
their stream direction this all becomes questionable. However most projects do
not even have an argument other than 'this is the distribution I know'.
The only long term alternative I see, is using containers that hardly have any
os dependency and behave more like micro services. So you focus on the direct
updates of suppliers.