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Open-Xchange

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Open-Xchange
Developer(s)Open-Xchange AG
Initial release2005
Stable release
7.10.6[1] / December 10, 2021; 2 years ago (2021-12-10)
Repository
Operating systemSLES, RHEL, Debian, Univention Corporate Server, CentOS
TypeWeb desktop
LicenseCommunity Edition: Backend - GNU Affero General Public License (AGPL) v.3.0; Frontend - GNU AGPL v.3.0
Websiteopen-xchange.com

Open-Xchange is an open source web-based office productivity software suite.

History

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Founded in 2005 by Rafael Laguna and Frank Hoberg, the software was released in December of the same year, and started as a Linux-based email and groupware program that was positioned as open-source alternative to Microsoft Exchange.[2]

Andreas Gauger took over as CEO of Open-Xchange AG in May 2020.

Overview

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The software includes a set of applications for email, contacts, calendars, media and documents. It integrates message streams from Google Mail, Hotmail, Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn, and can be used as an alternative with integrated functionality similar to Microsoft Exchange Server and Office 365.[3]

In February 2014, file syncing and collaboration features have been added to the OX App Suite family.[citation needed]

In September 2014, the company introduced a tool called OX Guard to their existing open source email server. Individuals and businesses can use the software to operate their own email services.[4] In July 2015 PGP support has been announced for OX Guard.[5]

Licensing

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Community Edition: Backend - GNU Affero General Public License (AGPL) v.3.0; Frontend - GNU AGPL v.3.0.

References

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  1. ^ "New versions of OX App Suite, OX Documents and OX Guard available".
  2. ^ vincentdanen (2005-12-12). "Microsoft Exchange compatibility with Open-Xchange". TechRepublic. Retrieved 2023-12-20.
  3. ^ Joos, Thomas (2015-05-18). "Open-Xchange App Suite als Alternative zu Exchange und Office 365" [Open-Xchange as an alternative to Exchange and Office 365]. ZDNet.de (in German). CBS Interactive. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
  4. ^ By Klint Finley, Wired. "The Open Source Tool That Lets You Send Encrypted Emails to Anyone"
  5. ^ mailbox.org launches one-click email and content encryption based on PGP