Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Exchange server linux

Exchange server linux One of the things you’ll run into quickly with enterprise open source offerings is open core offerings — meaning some of the software is open source, other bits are under a proprietary license of some kind. Usually connectors to Microsoft Outlook and mobile synchronization are held back, or features that are primarily focused on the enterprise — like clustering to provide scalability and fail over.

Typically these costs will be much less than actually deploying Exchange, so organizations that need them are happy to pay the licensing. The downside is that they’re not actually open source, so you lose some of the benefits of open source when choosing an open core solution. I’m not going to hop on a soapbox either way, but it’s worth pointing out that when you’re talking enterprise open source be sure to verify which features are open and which may be held back for licensing fees.
Microsoft Exchange Server is Microsoft's email, calendaring, contact, scheduling and collaboration platform. It is deployed on the Windows Server operating system (OS) for business use. Telephony capabilities in Exchange Server support voice messages. Exchange users collaborate through calendar and document sharing.

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