WHY was Thunderbird 115 called "Supernova?" What caused the press to declare Thunderbird dead back in 2012? And how did we turn the ship around? Ryan Sipes answers these questions and much more in his personal recollection of Thunderbird's history.
Just curious what you are using. I have a domain as well, and occasionally consider setting up another email server for it. I also still have some old old accounts that are still linked to my domain email, but I just haven't run an email server in years. Is it something turnkey that I don't need to spend weeks configuring? In fact I might only turn it on long enough to receive emails so that I can change the accounts.
I am not happy with my provider, currently waiting for the email hosting to expire so that I can maintain just the domain there and eventually user zoho for hosting
I use Mailcow and it works well. Easy to configure, and it uses Docker so it's self-contained and very easy to move to a new server if you ever need to do that.
I'm using an SMTP relay for outbound emails, though. I didn't want to have to deal with IP reputation issues, especially with Microsoft/Hotmail. I'm hosting my server on a VPS, and spammers in the same subnet can result in the entire subnet getting blocklisted. Configuring a relay is easy in Mailcow's UI, and can be configured per domain.
Just curious what you are using. I have a domain as well, and occasionally consider setting up another email server for it. I also still have some old old accounts that are still linked to my domain email, but I just haven't run an email server in years. Is it something turnkey that I don't need to spend weeks configuring? In fact I might only turn it on long enough to receive emails so that I can change the accounts.
I am not happy with my provider, currently waiting for the email hosting to expire so that I can maintain just the domain there and eventually user zoho for hosting
Thanks. I will take a look.
I use Mailcow and it works well. Easy to configure, and it uses Docker so it's self-contained and very easy to move to a new server if you ever need to do that.
I'm using an SMTP relay for outbound emails, though. I didn't want to have to deal with IP reputation issues, especially with Microsoft/Hotmail. I'm hosting my server on a VPS, and spammers in the same subnet can result in the entire subnet getting blocklisted. Configuring a relay is easy in Mailcow's UI, and can be configured per domain.