dang 21 hours ago

Related. Others?

Pegasus Mail - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36988047 - Aug 2023 (92 comments)

Pegasus Mail Newsflashes - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=31413891 - May 2022 (3 comments)

Pegasus Mail, 30 Years On - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21975087 - Jan 2020 (46 comments)

Pegasus Mail - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=14144731 - April 2017 (49 comments)

Pegasus Mail: Twenty years and counting... - https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=2115730 - Jan 2011 (12 comments)

jjbinx007 20 hours ago

We used to run this on our Novell Netware system and it integrated beautifully.

I still use it occasionally even now when I want to decode attachments from emails that I only have the plain text of.

We also ran Mercury Mail server for a few years as well. The software always felt like it was a labour of love from the author.

felixding 13 hours ago

The website was made using FrontPage 3. Ha, that brings back a lot of memories.

  • wkat4242 7 hours ago

    Ohhh frontpage. Wonderful product that taught people positioning with no break spaces.

    I made good money cleaning all that shit up when people thought they could do a website and painted themselves into a corner. And I wasn't even a web designer. More like a programmer. Though that whole qualification (web designer) was still emerging in those days.

    In Holland we used to call frontpage 'strontpage', stront meaning shit. Pretty apt name for the quality of content it produced.

    Of course then came Dreamweaver which was what it says on the tin, a dream to work with. With great CSS support. Until adobe took it over and made it subscription crap it was a really nice product. Macromedia was pretty great except for flash.

    • bbarnett 6 hours ago

      Adobe, another one of those "buy and squeeze the juice out until it dies" companies.

      I can't really see an easy way to allow good companies to flourish, and ones which are malign in this way to not, but companies like Adobe, Broadcom, Oracle need to just be destroyed.

fulafel 9 hours ago

Anyone have links or something else to relate about what would be the oldest x86 SMTP node?

cgcrob 19 hours ago

Looked after a 1000 seat Pegasus and Mercury installation on Netware in the 90s. Surprised to hear it is still going!

retrocryptid 5 hours ago

I guess this is for DOS only systems? I used elm on BSD/386 in the 80s, and honestly was a little surprised to learn it's still being maintained by Kari Hurtta. And then I was thinking, Pegasus can't be older than Pine, Alpine or Mutt, can it? But yes, it is. You learn something new every day.

EVa5I7bHFq9mnYK a day ago

I remember setting it up in 1996 for our small company:) Was a replacement for Compuserve :)

wkat4242 7 hours ago

Oh yeah I remember deploying that in a Novell NetWare environment lol. Had no idea that still existed.

From the title I thought it was about sendmail. But that is not really PC no, at least not in the days when Unixes were huge server boxes

nice_byte 8 hours ago

for those who use it, how do you deal with the fact that it stores mail on your hard drive un-encrypted? Do encrypt the entire volume?

  • karlgkk 7 hours ago

    I mean… if it’s your hard drive, you presumably have key read/export access to any keystore that you could possibly use. Which is to say, what’s the point?

Kwpolska 4 hours ago

The site doesn't have a single screenshot. This was acceptable 30 years ago, but certainly not today.