Sam Smith wrote: > I'll defer to new admin by acclamation Sarah on the technical side of > this, but it sounds good. Does it have a Web interface or is it > old-school unix-driven? One can manage via the Web, though I used the email admin commands (with a password). Compared to Google/Yahoo it's still old school, but the tweakability is as detailed as any list manager I've ever used (and I've used them all at one time or another). > I'd also be interested in knowing how it might > serve certain kinds of social media output functions (widgets and the > like). Nada, zippo. But you can feed email into just about anything you want these days. The smarts would be in those newer, aware apps. One big potential downside with Yahoo is they are about to be bought by Microsoft. And that could be a nasty downside. And the downside to Google is it still needs a few more admin dials & knobs to be the killer list server. But Googles unlimited storage for most apps is really appealing. And I would imagine Google will over time link it to Picassa, Blogger (RSS) & the like. > But if Sarah likes what she sees, this is in fact a not-bad idea. I'll contact her directly as it appears she has the admin job. My deepest sympathies Sarah :) - Michael