Wayne Mery (vn) <<email address hidden> wrote>:
> I wrote:
> > unless Thunderbird gains useful LDAP support for reading and writing
> > address books, there is no way to place Thunderbird onto the corporate
> > desktop, although there are other limiting factors around as well.
> a_geek, are you in a corporate environment?
First off, please quote properly, and keep it here.
To answer the question: A large part of my work is as a consultant to corporations with typically several hundred users, and my mind set is tweaked towards the requirements of such organisations. But I have a hard time seeing TB even in the SME area, as they also at least want shared address books and calendaring throughout the company, and will not accept an out-of-band management requirement for their address books (this is a large part of what LDAP access is about).
Wayne Mery (vn) <<email address hidden> wrote>:
> I wrote:
> > unless Thunderbird gains useful LDAP support for reading and writing
> > address books, there is no way to place Thunderbird onto the corporate
> > desktop, although there are other limiting factors around as well.
> a_geek, are you in a corporate environment?
First off, please quote properly, and keep it here.
To answer the question: A large part of my work is as a consultant to corporations with typically several hundred users, and my mind set is tweaked towards the requirements of such organisations. But I have a hard time seeing TB even in the SME area, as they also at least want shared address books and calendaring throughout the company, and will not accept an out-of-band management requirement for their address books (this is a large part of what LDAP access is about).