By Philip Churchill on June 30th, 2008
Add-In: VPOP3 2.6.0d
VPOP3 for Windows Home Server; the email server add-in has been updated to version 2.6.0d
More information and the evaluation/registered version are available, as are three new tutorial videos:
- Download and install VPOP3 for Windows Home Server
- Configure VPOP3 for Windows Home Server
- Configure Outlook Express to use VPOP3 for Windows Home Server
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WHS is always using beta quality third party add-ins on production machines. And people wonder why they experience bugs? Give me a break… Stop using Beta, and START offering “Works for Sure” instead “quality tested and done right the first time!
In addition, why is the Redmond-based Microsoft flatly ignoring the substantial pleas of its customer base, by refusing to sell the Windows XP operating system, except only on the ultra low-cost sub-notebook hardware category?
Without a doubt, the current adaption of Windows XP is many times higher than Vista will ever be. so how those that help sell WHS, to be only made available and supported for Vista? When in fact, Vista 64bit isn’t even supported on WHS?
And all this, just when the world’s leading chipmaker Intel, last week became the latest of Microsoft’s enterprise customers to reveal that it has no firm future plans to upgrade its international network of computer systems from XP over to Vista.
What’s next, Microsoft Windows Home Server 2nd edition “Vail” will only work with Vista too? Being how Microsoft windows 98 and 95 are NOT supported at all on WHS!
Just how is Windows Home Server going to be able to deliver?
I read somewhere that MS is encouraging people to use Vista now itself because according to them Windows 7 will be just like Vista!!! God save MS then …
I read somewhere that MS is encouraging people to use Vista now itself because according to them Windows 7 will be just like Vista! God save MS then …
“Linux is so dynamic, anyone can contribute to it and its many applications! Open source FTW!”
“WHS allows people to write add-ins for it, which only proves that it’s not ready for the mainstream! Down with Microsoft!”