[64998] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: Openwave Opinions
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Rubens Kuhl Jr.)
Sat Nov 8 17:57:23 2003
Reply-To: "Rubens Kuhl Jr." <rubens@email.com>
From: "Rubens Kuhl Jr." <rubens@email.com>
To: "Fisher, Shawn" <SFisher@Bresnan.com>,
"Nanog List (E-mail)" <nanog@merit.edu>
Date: Sat, 8 Nov 2003 20:53:26 -0200
Errors-To: owner-nanog-outgoing@merit.edu
> Anyone have any openwave mail MX opinions or experience good or bad?
Every mail product that costs lots of money will yield a worse overall
solution that using a good free/open-source mail software (postfix, qmail,
exim... pick one) and spending money on people with good technical skills to
tune and adapt the system. Unless, of course, your financial resources are
unlimited...
> Design question: Is it better to have integrated or seperate Anti-spam
and
> Anti-virus built into the mail platform?
There are some design mistakes (such as trying to do these time-consuming
process synchronously) that both integrated and isolated anti-spam/virus
solutions have shown... the interesting thing with separate solutions is
that you can see the architeture from the configuration instructions, so
someone can quickly tell if that solution will scale or not. Using
monolithic or separate solutions will have some strategic consequences, but
design issues can arise in both.
Rubens