Software

Open365

Open365: When You Want a Self-Hosted Office Suite — and You’re Not a Google Fan Let’s face it — not every organization wants to hand over its documents and emails to a cloud giant. For those looking to keep things local, but still have the tools people expect (email, calendar, document editing), Open365 once tried to be that all-in-one answer. What Was It?

MailEnable

MailEnable: A Mail Server for Windows That Doesn’t Overcomplicate Things Sometimes, setting up email turns into a whole separate job. Between Exchange licensing and Linux-based mail stacks, it’s easy to feel stuck in the middle. MailEnable comes in as a sort of “just enough” solution — especially for folks who want something native on Windows and don’t want to wrestle with config files all day. So What’s It About?

Xeams

Xeams: Email Server Meets Spam Filter — and Doesn’t Require Linux to Work Running your own mail server is already tricky. Running one with decent spam filtering and a usable UI? Even harder. Xeams offers a way to get both — in a single package, and yes, even on Windows. What’s the Idea Here?

hMailServer

hMailServer: A Full Email Server on Windows — Without the Bloat Setting up a mail server sounds like trouble — Linux configs, Postfix voodoo, endless DNS tweaks. But hMailServer makes it possible to run a functional email system right on Windows. No need to touch a terminal, no need for 10 layers of abstraction. So, What Is hMailServer?

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