At this year’s CeBIT (1-5 March, Hannover), Zarafa, the leading European provider of open source groupware and collaboration software, will show that the Zarafa Collaboration Platform (ZCP) has grown to the European open source groupware standard.
The primary objective of open source software company Zarafa has been to develop a drop-in replacement for Microsoft Exchange. But simply replicating groupware functionality is not enough to achieve that goal — Zarafa also needs to create enterprise-class security solutions for its products.
Zarafa, the European drop-in Microsoft Exchange replacement for email, calendaring, collaboration and tasks, is expanding into Eastern Europe. Now that the latest version of the Zarafa Collaboration Platform also supports languages outside Western Europe, Zarafa can meet the growing demand from Eastern Europe.
Zarafa, the fastest growing commercial Linux-based groupware company in Europe, has benefited from the growing demand of organizations for integrated open source software. In the last four months dozens of software vendors and developers in open source projects have integrated or packaged software to Zarafa’s open source email and calendar solution.
Zarafa, the leading European provider of open source email and collaboration software, and ClearCenter, a leading provider of hybrid IT and on-premise open source Linux gateway, network, and server solutions, today announced the integration of the Zarafa Collaboration Platform (ZCP) with ClearCenter’s ClearOS Professional.
At FOSDEM 2011 (5-6 February, Brussels), Zarafa, the leading European provider of open source groupware and collaboration will present its new Zarafa Collaboration Platform (ZCP) 7.0.0 beta2 with a new, faster IMAP gateway and share how Enterprise MySQL performance can be doubled.
From an ignorant American perspective, the European market may seem like a more natural fit for open source software than the United States. After all, aren’t those countries across the Atlantic populated by liberty-obsessed socialists with a natural affinity for sharing everything? To be sure, this view is hopelessly stereotypical.
Microsoft Exchange, an essential component of many IT environments, has long been a thorn in the side of system administrators who would like to consider open source alternatives to proprietary software. But Zarafa, an open source groupware platform, is rapidly emerging as a formidable alternative to Exchange.
Zarafa, the new groupware standard in the still growing European Linux server market, today announced that its open source email and calendar software has reached the next level in secure mobile communications.