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- From: ip_boss@degsyd.syd.deg.csiro.au (Jack Churchill)
- Newsgroups: vmsnet.mail.pmdf
- Subject: RE: Mail User agents
- Message-ID: <1992Aug16.201127.143@degsyd.syd.deg.csiro.au>
- Date: 16 Aug 92 20:11:26 +1000
- References: <9208132259.AA12725@jarrah.itd.adelaide.edu.au>
- Organization: CSIRO, Exploration Geoscience
- Lines: 54
-
- In article <9208132259.AA12725@jarrah.itd.adelaide.edu.au>, andrewr@itd.adelaide.edu.au writes:
- > The real problem is that you can usually rely on VMS or Unix
- > machines to be up 24 hours a day to receive mail, and you can connect
- > to them from anywhere, whereas PC's and Mac's are usually only on
- > during office hours, and you can't connect to them from elsewhere to
- > check your mail. Thus the SMTP direct to your desk concept won't work,
- > as the basic assumptions about machine avalibility aren't held.
- > So the concept employed is that there is one central place
- > that stays up all day, and you can access from all over the place. The
- > problem now is that PC and Mac users expect a GUI as opposed to the
- > CUI's we all use for VMS/Unix based mail. So the software companies
- > are forced to have some wonderful interface that'll knock your socks
- > off, and is necesarily different from the type that gets shunted over
- > SMTP.
-
- That's why "store and forward" methods like POP have been very popular for
- PCs and MACs of late. There some very nice looking POP client programs
- available to overcome the issue of not having your personal computer
- turned on all the time.
-
- > In summary, I agree that the current state of affairs is
- > woeful, but given the time, locality, and user expectation
- > constraints, I don't think it's going to get a lot better in the near
- > future. And you're never going to get micro software houses to
- > standardise on one mail format, unless it is almost forced on them
- > from the outside.
- > I'm sure I can here a flamethrower warming up...
-
- Not a flamethrower. I agree that the current state is terrible.
- Something has to be done to reverse the trend in the number of different
- ways in implementing e-mail by various companies. Otherwise, we will end
- up with the stupid situation of requiring all sorts of complicated
- gateways to handle different mailers and protocols on the same network
- like the internet. And what happens if your local network uses computers
- from different vendors (e.g., DEC, IBM, SGI, SUN, HP, etc)? You then have
- X400 and other transports competing with SMTP. Granted Digital has some
- nice solutions but so do many other vendors (most are cheaper too). Seems
- to me that the best thing so far is to stay with SMTP and build up from
- their with MIME-compatible mailers for PCs, MACs, VMS and UNIX systems,
- which is already well underway. I hope MIME is adopted as a defacto
- standard by all commercial companies like tcp/ip was, not necessarily
- because I like MIME but because it works over a variety of systems and is
- rapidly gaining in popularity over the internet (RFC1341). This may be the
- "outside force" to get software houses to standardise on one mail format.
- PMDF-MIME is a great start for VMS systems. All we need now is a nice and
- powerful front end like so many packages that are already available for
- PCs, MACs, and UNIX. Is Digital likely to provide one or do we have to
- rely on the public domain?
-
- Jack N. Churchill | jack@syd.deg.csiro.au
- CSIRO Division of Exploration Geoscience | churchill@decus.com.au
- PO Box 136 North Ryde NSW 2113 | Phone: +61 2 887 8884
- Australia | Fax: +61 2 887 8909
- ** Unless otherwise specified, the opinions expressed here are my own. **
-