mail client reviews and downloads
Search results for «mail client»:
Showing 1 to 10 from 10 matches
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Dada Mail 2.10.11 Dada Mail project is a general purpose mailing list manager who is targeted to be used for small to medium organizations such as busi GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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Virge 3.04rc3 Virge is mail 'scanner' written in C, which replaces/substitutes procmail for a while, checks the incoming mail, and then sends the m BSD License |
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Mail::Digest::Tools 2.11 Mail::Digest::Tools is a Perl module that has tools for digest versions of mailing lists. SYNOPSIS use Mail::Digest::Tools GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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Yahoo Mail Sucker pr75 As you probably know, Yahoo Mail does not provide free POP access to its users any more GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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Claws Mail 2.6.1 Sylpheed ClawsClaws Mail (previously known as Sylpheed-Claws) project is an e-mail client (and GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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Fetchmail 6.3.5 Fetchmail is a full-featured, robust, well-documented remote-mail retrieval and forwarding utility intended to be used over on-demand GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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Fetchmail 6.2.9 RC10 Fetchmail is a full-featured, robust, well-documented remote-mail retrieval and forwarding utility intended to be used over on-demand GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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Cone 0.69 Cone project is a text-based mail client GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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AeroMail 2.52 AeroMail 2 is the next generation of Mark Cushman's AeroMail. AeroMail is a web-based e-mail client written in PHP GPL (GNU General Public License) |
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BL4's SMTP server 0.1.9R BL4's SMTP server is an inbound only SMTP server. BL4's SMTP server currently uses hardcoded values for handling email. The SMTP server puts the incoming email into various text files. About SMTP protocol: Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) is the de facto standard for e-mail transmission across the Internet. SMTP is a relatively simple, text-based protocol, where one or more recipients of a message are specified (and in most cases verified to exist) and then the message text is transferred. It is quite easy to test a SMTP server using the telnet program. SMTP uses TCP port 25. To determine the SMTP server for a given domain name, the MX (Mail eXchange) DNS record is used. SMTP started becoming widely used in the early 1980s. At the time, it was a complement to UUCP which was better suited to handle e-mail transfers between machines that were intermittently connected. SMTP, on the other hand, works best when both the sending and receiving machines are connected to the network all the time. Sendmail was one of the first (if not the first) mail transfer agents to implement SMTP. As of 2001 there are at least 50 programs that implement SMTP as a client (sender of messages) or a server (receiver of messages). Some other popular SMTP server programs include Philip Hazel's exim, IBM's Postfix, D. J. Bernstein's qmail, and Microsoft Exchange Server. Since this protocol started out as purely ASCII text-based, it did not deal well with binary files. Standards such as MIME were developed to encode binary files for transfer through SMTP. Today, most SMTP servers support the 8BITMIME extension, permitting binary files to be transmitted almost as easily as plain text. SMTP is a "push" protocol that does not allow one to "pull" messages from a remote server on demand. To do this a mail client must use POP3 or IMAP. Another SMTP server can trigger a delivery in SMTP using ETRN. What's New in This Release: ยท The ability to run a script when each email message is received was added. Freeware |
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