topbanner_forum
  *

avatar image

Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
  • Friday May 16, 2025, 11:17 pm
  • Proudly celebrating 15+ years online.
  • Donate now to become a lifetime supporting member of the site and get a non-expiring license key for all of our programs.
  • donate

Recent Posts

Pages: prev1 ... 360 361 362 363 364 [365] 366 367 368 369 370 ... 438next
9101
General Software Discussion / Re: Email Server Frustration -- Looking for Advice
« Last post by Renegade on November 23, 2010, 02:33 PM »
From my perspective, running a mailserver is no longer a fun or interesting or educational activity. The blush has long since gone off the rose on that for me.

Amen to that!

But honestly, I'm still pretty much terrified of relying on hosted services.

Things get really, really scary when they want to control your DNS... Sheesh...

I suppose I'm somewhat paranoid.
9102
General Software Discussion / Re: Email Server Frustration -- Looking for Advice
« Last post by Renegade on November 23, 2010, 01:34 PM »
^You're obviously a more committed than me when it comes to email servers.

Nowadays I'm more inclined to go with an inexpensive email setup through a reasonable hosting company like Dreamhost unless there are very unique or special requirements involved.

IMHO, for vanilla POP, IMAP and webmail it's a lot easier (and cheaper if you value your time at more than $3/hr.  ;)) to farm the "tech part" out, only do the administration - and save your personal hardware and "little gray cells" for something far more interesting than email.

But maybe that's just me.  ;D

Luck! :Thmbsup:



I've simply been burned too many times by crappy services.

WebHost4Life? Groan... Some of the worst, dishonest, lying, scum.

Layered Technologies? Some of the worst, most incompetent, retards.

I'm skittish about farming some things out. Email for $3? Nah... Too cheap. Scares me.

An email account costs around $100 a year to run if you're running any of the top software. Antivirus will run you $20 to $60. Antispam about the same. The account itself will cost $20 to $40 depending on the number of users you have. It adds up quickly. This is why I don't like to pay for "user" licenses. I like being able to add accounts at a whim.

When I see cheap stuff, it just scares me.


I'm running Windows 2008 R2.

Ah! that explains alot.

PHP is bad enough to get working properly. (Always a plethora of standard components in it that break it entirely on Windows.
Biggest problem I've seen with PHP on Windows is most folks either use the installer package, or follow the (quickie way) instructions found online. Both are wrong.

Install only the parts you are going to use (much less attack surface), and put the script extension in the location MS intended...not on the root of the C: drive (Eliminates a ton of before & after permissions issues).

I did a quick bounce into the home lab - This is a clean and lean manual PHP install - IIRC these settings also worked on my current IIS7 (2k8) web server.

These are the Files & File Paths used for the MySQL db &
PHP Script support installation on IIS6 (Webster) <-Old now decommissioned server)

FOR PHP SUPPORT ONLY:

C:\Windows\php.ini
C:\Windows\System32\php5ts.dll
C:\Windows\System32\inetsrv\php5isapi.dll
---------------------------------------------------------

For PHP with MySQL Support ADD These Files:

C:\Windows\System32\libmysql.dll <-"Helper" File, Required for ANY of the Extensions to Work)
C:\Windows\System32\inetsrv\phpext\php_mysql.dll
---------------------------------------------------------

IF Using MS-SQL (Which Includes the MSDE Version) ADD These Files:

C:\Windows\System32\ntwdblib.dll
C:\Windows\System32\inetsrv\phpext\php_mssql.dll


NOTE: These additional Files are required (in these locations) to load & run the PHP_cURL.DLL module.

C:\Windows\System32\inetsrv\phpext\php_curl.dll
C:\Windows\System32\libeay32.dll
C:\Windows\System32\ssleay32.dll


At the moment I'm running the new PHP installation under FastCGI with the php-cgi.exe instead of the ISAPI DLL. On my other server I use the ISAPI. Both are the ZIP file and not the installer. FastCGI is supposed to give far better performance (20x?), so that's why I'm running with that.

I must confess though, I prefer to keep C:\PHP as my install location and configure paths instead. It makes for an easier upgrade, and I don't need to "remember" every path and file then. God knows my records are non-existent.

But I've had no real problems other than uncommenting some extensions like php_whatever.dll breaks PHP. They're so horribly documented that it just makes it a nightmare to figure out. A good number of extensions break. And I'm too busy to look into things further for anything but critical extensions, which all seem to work fine.

I only enable PHP for sites that use it though.

I use My Personal Proxy with SSL so I can surf without the ISP snooping on me, but it's a PITA and doesn't really work very well. It's also rather slow. That one is under the ISAPI, but the server is old too, and one of the reasons for the new one. I think it's mostly bad coding though that makes it slow.

My ASP.NET applications on the old server run nicely though.

Anyways, this is way off topic. :) Still enjoyable though. :)

Any reasons why you like PHP in the Windows folder? It just seems somewhat dirty to me and hard to maintain. I've not really seen any practical upshot for it, so I'd love to hear more. :)
9103
Living Room / Re: Wi-Fi Makes Trees Sick!
« Last post by Renegade on November 23, 2010, 12:13 PM »
Wi-Fi Easy Bake City. :)

Scary stuff. God only knows what we're doing to ourselves.
9104
General Software Discussion / Re: Email Server Frustration -- Looking for Advice
« Last post by Renegade on November 23, 2010, 12:03 PM »
Actually, Postfix is the server that I really wanted to run, but no... That's for CentOS. I'm running Windows 2008 R2.

I skipped over Postfix because I really don't like the "cross-platform" voodoo that's needed to get anything from the *nix world running properly on Windows. PHP is bad enough to get working properly. (Always a plethora of standard components in it that break it entirely on Windows. Uncomment... Break... Comment out again... Next... Rinse. Repeat.)

What I really should have done is installed VMware and then had Windows and Linux running inside. No time anymore though. :(

9105
General Software Discussion / Re: Email Server Frustration -- Looking for Advice
« Last post by Renegade on November 23, 2010, 11:45 AM »
Well, I think I'm sticking with hMailServer and AfterLogic Webmail and ClamWin for now.

hMailServer seems quite good so far. There are some things that I'd like to see in it, but they aren't 100% crucial, e.g. IP per domain, etc.

AfterLogic is a nice front end though. I installed Squirrelmail, and wow... is it fugly. It's also miserable to configure. AfterLogic Webmail was very easy to config. Which is nice because it indicates some polish. The UI for it is quite slick -- uses AJAX.
9106
Living Room / Re: "Check mail every ??? minutes"
« Last post by Renegade on November 23, 2010, 12:26 AM »
Outlook. No setting for it. :( Or none that I can see. Can't be bothered to look too deep as I just check manually most of the time.
9107
Living Room / Desktop vs. Web Debate
« Last post by Renegade on November 22, 2010, 09:03 PM »
Hey, let's start a fight and open some wounds~! :P

 :onfire:    

In the past I've been averse to moving things to the web, but I think I'm softening quite a bit.

While the desktop is still king over a lot of things, I feel like it is slowly losing ground.

The entire "boot from the web" stuff is still nonsense at the moment, and I think it will remain nonsense for a long time to come. Mostly because of Internet infrastructure requirements just aren't there.

But I keep seeing things that really make sense on the web.

While Flash is still the defacto video method, Silverlight video is far better, and we have yet to see what HTML5 will afford us.

It just seems like there is a lot more that's viable on the web than there was 5 years ago.

Ok, I suppose them's not really fightin' words, but I tried. :)
9108
Living Room / Re: Boxee??
« Last post by Renegade on November 22, 2010, 08:53 PM »
Hmmm... Maybe I should check it out more.
9109
Living Room / Re: Are "you" "your friend"?
« Last post by Renegade on November 22, 2010, 08:52 PM »
This is something that's rather sad - that so many people never learn to speak their own language properly. :(

the curious thing about this not that they never learn proper language skills, rather that they can actually communicate at all

Hahahaha~! And I thought *I* was cynical~! :D
9110
Developer's Corner / Re: Goofy Google Search Results
« Last post by Renegade on November 22, 2010, 08:16 PM »
One wonders why, when you "look for an error" you expect to find a *solution*. ;)

- Oshyan

Hahahaha~!

Touche~! :D
9111
Developer's Corner / Re: Goofy Google Search Results
« Last post by Renegade on November 22, 2010, 01:46 PM »
The goofy thing is that when you look for an error, you expect to find the solution. The result is the error, which is entirely irrelevant and useless.
9112
General Software Discussion / Re: Email Server Frustration -- Looking for Advice
« Last post by Renegade on November 22, 2010, 12:54 PM »
This is where I want to cry... I just can't do it with Exchange.

First, I'd need DNS servers, which means 2 more machines -- no go.

Then, Active Directory - Nightmare from Hell.

Exchange just doesn't cut it as it's too big for me.

I'm running 1 server for this (well, I have another, but I want everything on 1), so...

I think I've decided to suck it up and go with hMailServer. But if anyone knows of a good Windows email server that doesn't charge by the inbox, I'd appreciate it.

I only need about 50 inboxes or so. Most are things like sales@, support@, postmaster@, abuse@, info@, etc. I just don't want to pay for that. Postmaster and abuse are mandatory (by RFC), so...

Another thing though, does anyone know of a good webmail program? I'm using Squirrelmail, but it's pretty basic. No RTE even. Sigh...

I hate email. :( ;(
9113
General Software Discussion / Re: Down load Dups Checker?
« Last post by Renegade on November 22, 2010, 12:44 PM »
Is there a downloading program that can scan your system (before d/l) for an existing progam to avoid creating dups..?

Reliably? Nope. Can't be done.
9114
Developer's Corner / Goofy Google Search Results
« Last post by Renegade on November 22, 2010, 07:07 AM »
Ok, this I MUST share...

Check this results page:

http://www.google.co...r+403.14+-+Forbidden

Read the search terms.

Click the second result (http://hybridoptix.net/). :P

Search results... You're doing it wrong...
9115
Living Room / Re: Still holding out, won't join Facebook
« Last post by Renegade on November 22, 2010, 04:35 AM »
Twitter I can tolerate, but that's because I can choose my level of engagement. I'm in, I'm out, or I can skip a month and no one notices or cares. I use it more like an RSS feed than for communication.

You can do the same thing with FB. Don't post. Just check what people are up to. I've got a few friends that do that. I basically never see them online there.
9116
Living Room / Re: Decision making time.
« Last post by Renegade on November 22, 2010, 01:29 AM »
Employment is overrated, but super mutant powers would definitely be cool~! :D

I thought that you were looking to do them yourself.

To be honest, starting with a smaller project and working up is much easier. You'll screw up on small things then have the experience to not screw up on the big things. :) Well, at least that's how it works for me. :D
9117
Living Room / Re: Decision making time.
« Last post by Renegade on November 22, 2010, 12:52 AM »
Create a MMORPG
Create Poker Client/Server Software

Are you unemployed? And do you have super powers? Specifically the super power to be able to split yourself into multiple versions of yourself with at least 100 copies and preferably more?

If the answer is yes, then go for the MMORPG. If not, forget it.

The poker thing is much more realistic. However, I think it's a bad choice. Unless you are already in the industry, it's a hard one to crack.

You've picked some INCREDIBLY difficult things there.
9118
General Software Discussion / Re: Email Server Frustration -- Looking for Advice
« Last post by Renegade on November 21, 2010, 10:46 PM »
I used to use Argosoft many years ago before switching to a paid version of mDaemon.  Have you tried hMailServer?  It has SpamAssassin integrated.  I've never tried it myself...just throwing a bone out there.

I'm actually switching to hMailServer now. Going over antispam stuff at the moment...

I think I'm out of time. I fly out in a few days, and need to do a ton of stuff.

I looked into the VMware stuff more... I'd have to wipe the server entirely. I thought it was more like the desktop version. Oops. So, I think I'll end up trying to get Spamassassin working in a month or so.

The thing is that hMailServer requires you to install and configure Spamassassin, and SA is nothing short of Black Magic. You have to fart around in Perl and make crap and sacrifice children... It's a non-ending process of self-mutilation. You lose a bit of your soul in doing so...

9119
General Software Discussion / Re: Email Server Frustration -- Looking for Advice
« Last post by Renegade on November 21, 2010, 09:15 PM »
I've used a few. Currently using Argosoft. I used to use Mercury32.
9120
General Software Discussion / Email Server Frustration -- Looking for Advice
« Last post by Renegade on November 21, 2010, 12:47 PM »
This post is basically for administrators and not end users.

Well, I'm fed up with my current email server software and looking for some new email server software.

I've been trying to find a good combination of:

* Email server software
* Antivirus software
* Antispam software

But, I'm running a Windows machine, and there's just crap out there unless I want to spend a fortune, which I don't. I'd like to get some decent software for a reasonable price or free. I'm not interested in Johnny's garage software though. I'm only interested in well established software with a track record that I can rely on.

I will be installing VMware vSphere Hypervisor (ESXi) in order to have a Linux server running on the same machine.

Can anyone recommend a combination of:

* Linux distribution (Preferably one that's already in the VMware catalog if possible, or maybe ThoughtPolice.)
* Email server software (Postfix, Zimba, etc.)
* Antivirus software
* Antispam software (hopefully not a "per user" license. Spamassassin?)
* Webmail interface for email server (e.g. Zimba, SquirrelMail, etc.)

At the end of the day, I want to get things running properly

I will also likely end up running a limited set of websites on it, so lighttpd and Apache will also be important later on, but not crucial now.

If you have personal experience, please say so. Also, if you've done virtualization before in production environments (not desktop), please say so.

I had a look at Spamassassin, and it's simply not worth the trouble on Windows. The installation and configuration for it is nothing short of Black Magic. I'm open to a Linux version if I can get it to work without sacrificing virgins and children to the devil.



Thanks in advance for any recommendations.


9121
Living Room / Re: The conflict of interest that is Google
« Last post by Renegade on November 21, 2010, 10:52 AM »
No sweat. I confuse stuff all the time. :)
9122
Living Room / Re: The conflict of interest that is Google
« Last post by Renegade on November 21, 2010, 01:24 AM »
I think it was Alfred Nobel who invented dynamite. Another fellow invented nitroglycerin though.

It was synthesized by chemist Ascanio Sobrero in 1847, working under Théophile-Jules Pelouze at the University of Turin.

http://en.wikipedia....g/wiki/Nitroglycerin

Did he work for DuPont?
9123
Living Room / Re: Desktop Linux: The dream is dead
« Last post by Renegade on November 21, 2010, 12:09 AM »
...

The cloud has already made the OS irrelevant for me. I can visit and do anything on any site I want involving multimedia on my Linux machine. The only things left that I (personally) do on the desktop is (1) spreadsheet work, (2) photo editing, and (3) other LibreOffice tasks. I'm just an end user, not a corporation, not a company, not a programmer. I used to do everything on the desktop, but again, free cloud services has taken much of that away. One example: I no longer keep MP3's on my HD, instead I have several dozen playlists of songs from YouTube, most of them HQ and/or concert performances. It's pretty cool to hear (and see) David Bowie play variations of the same song over the past 41 years!

I could go on. But my point is simple: I'm not ceding any ground or money to a corporation, be it Apple, Microsoft, Facebook, or the ever-growing behemoth, Google. A corporation does not have my interest at stake, does not share my values toward open data, and has not earned my trust. Like governments, they will inevitably disappoint. Microsoft, Apple, and Google will justify just about anything to sell their products in China, even piracy and theft of their IP when China decides they're ready to keep the profit for themselves. Chinese jackasses hacked my Google account earlier this year and instead of letting me know something, Google just canceled my account and my data! (I had it all backed up, but they didn't even have the decency to inform me until eight weeks later what had happened to my account.) Go figure.


I've been slowly changing my mind about the cloud. I'm eeking over there slowly, but surely.

For the moment, I find a lot of things useful, and in fact do use some services. Other things, sorry. They're holy and on MY computer under MY control. 100%.

Your getting burned there is the exact reason why I've resisted for so long. I got burned before, and I don't want to get burned again.

I will be slowly moving into the cloud, but I'll make damn sure I've got a ladder in case I need to step down off the cloud...

Once the cloud is more of a reality, platforms will be less important. I think that's a good thing.

Still, I want to see strong open source initiatives and strong for-profit companies out there. We need both of them. Just one isn't going to cut it.
9124
Living Room / Re: What's Your Internet Speed/Reliability SATISFACTION?
« Last post by Renegade on November 20, 2010, 11:57 PM »
Cross fingers... Hope this is the solution...

After calling tech support a few times, I finally went out and bought a new modem/router.



I just hope this keeps up...
9125
Living Room / Boxee??
« Last post by Renegade on November 20, 2010, 11:53 PM »
Has anyone heard of or tried this? The "Boxee"?

http://www.dlink.com.au/Boxee/

Sounds good...

Particularly, if anyone in Australia knows about it, please chime in.
Pages: prev1 ... 360 361 362 363 364 [365] 366 367 368 369 370 ... 438next