Atmail is a fully-featured email server and Webmail client, allowing users to send and receive email via a Web browser or mobile device. It has full support for IMAP mailboxes, and an optional email-server mode that uses EXIM as the MTA. Features include a scheduler, MySQL backend support, spell-check, address book, calendar user preferences, multiple accounts, SpamAssassin support, migration scripts from other mail servers, a customizable interface, an attractive AJAX interface, an optional group sharing Calendar/Addressbook, and an Outlook plugin to sync Contacts/Tasks/Calendar data between a Desktop, Mobile, and Webmail client or other email users.
Last announcement
Atmail.com (http://atmail.com) has been rebooted with a fresh new theme and massive shack-up to the dating content. See the Atmail Email Server pro...
Recent releases


Release Notes: New features. A new Atmail 7 theme. New color customization options. New DAVSync. White-labeling options for DAVSync. Faster performance for big mailboxes. Many improvements and fixes.


Release Notes: This release adds an Outlook Add-in for Contacts and Calendar exchange syncing between Outlook and Atmail Server using ActiveSync.


Release Notes: This release adds online file storage with sharing and a mobile-optimized UI.


Release Notes: This is a minor release. It corrects uninitialized array usage in the dashboard controller during graph calculation. It corrects an unhandled exception in logsearch when no index or duration are specified. It corrects an unhandled exception in the user list for groups without users. It corrects an unhandled exception on invalid data for view contact.


Release Notes: Improvements to calendar migrations and improved support for Internet Explorer 8/9.
Recent comments
19 May 2008 14:57
Re: Too expensive
> Could you name a few?
atmail.org/ (atmail.org/r/) in fact.
It seems AtMail has now gone open source.
26 Jul 2006 20:37
Our evaluation tests of various Webmail apps
We have evaluated an extensive set of Webmail applications on behalf of our ISP client.
The tests involved using IMP, Roundcube, Squirelmail and @Mail.
Overall @Mail stood out from the crowd for the following reasons:
* Improved user-interface over the competition. An advanced interface for IE/Firefox ( using XUL ) and a lightweight Ajax interface are included. The interfaces are very well polished
Other clients like IMP, Squirelmail have a really bad end user interface/experience. Products like Roundcube are very lightweight and not as feature rich
* Outlook sync support - This was a nice plugin, users can sync addressbook/calendar data between a desktop client and Webmail
* Good Groupware support - Nice Calendar, Task, and shared contact support. Also has free/busy support which the competition is lacking or they are poorly implemented
* Wireless interface and SMS support - Also a nice plugin that our end users enjoy, which the other products don't have up to scratch
In summary there are good quality Webmail applications out there, and for our needs @Mail fit the pie best
26 Jul 2006 06:26
Re: Too expensive
>
> % Other viable alternatives are for
> FREE
>
>
> Could you name a few?
Roundcube - www.roundcube.net
While not as fully featured as @mail, and still in its infancy, Roundcube has to be doing well, since @mail founders are looking to get rid of Roundcube so they can have 1 less OS competitor :)
26 Jul 2006 04:32
Get your facts straight
As the authors of @Mail we have to disagree with your false acusations.
Firstly, @Mail does work under Suse Linux. The dependencies of the software are Apache, perl , gcc and mysql. If these are available under your OS the software can be installed.
Secondaly, the accusations of our technical team resetting root passwords, opening firewalls and exposing systems to hackers via SSH and Webmin are completely wrong. You should get your facts straight before you bad mouth a company without any backing to your claims.
Thirdly, we provide an online demo, download evaluation and a 30-day refund policy on the software. So you had plenty of opportunities to evaluate the software.
18 Jul 2006 07:50
Another Warning
Atmail may work on some systems, as noted above. But it does not and cannot be made to work on a number of Linux systems, including SuSE SLES.<br /><br />Moreover, the company will not issue a refund for any reason; and if you make the mistake of paying them to do the install, as I did, they will reset your firewall to give themselves permanent access, give themselves Root User access and, if they know you system cannot be made to work, will then expose it to hackers with SSH and Webmin. If you run Webmin (Perl) do not even consider giving them access. <b>Be very careful with these folks! Only a fraud action gets their attention after they have your money.</b>
A tool which splits a single WAV file into multiple wav files based on silence.
An attempt at cloning the original Pong for the Atari 2600 in pure C++ and SDL.