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Title: Mailman, the GNU Mailing List Manager
Links: links.h doco-links.h
Other-links:
<h3>Exits</h3>
<li><a href="http://www.python.org/">Python</a>
<li><a href="http://www.gnu.org/">GNU/FSF</a>
<li><a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/mailman/mailman.html">Mailman at GNU</a>
<li><a href="http://www.list.org/">List.Org mirror</a>
<li><a href="http://www.wooz.org/barry/">Barry Warsaw</a>
<h3>Mailman, the GNU Mailing List Manager</h3>
Mailman is software to help manage electronic mail discussion lists,
much like Majordomo or Smartmail. Mailman gives each mailing list a
unique web page and allows users to subscribe, unsubscribe, and change
their account options over the web. Even the list manager can
administer his or her list entirely via the web. Mailman has most of
the features that people want in a mailing list management system,
including built-in archiving, mail-to-news gateways, spam filters,
bounce detection, digest delivery, and so on. See the
<a href="features.html">features page</a> for more detail.
<p>Mailman is free software. It is distributed under the
<a href="http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html">GNU General Public
License</a>. The canonical Mailman home page is at
<a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/mailman/mailman.html">
www.gnu.org/software/mailman/mailman.html</a>, with more information
available at <a href="http://www.list.org/">www.list.org</a>. Mailman
is written in the <a href="http://www.python.org/">Python</a>
programming language, with a little bit of C code for security.
<p>By the way, the name of this software is spelled <em>Mailman</em>
with a capital leading <em>M</em> and a lowercase second <em>m</em>.
It is incorrect to spell it "MailMan" (i.e. you should not use
StudlyCaps).
<h3>Current Version</h3>
<p>Version
(<!-VERSION--->2.1a1<!-VERSION--->,
released on
<!-DATE--->Mar 4 2001<!-DATE--->)
is the current stable GNU release.
<h3>Acknowledgements</h3>
<p>Mailman is brought to you by the <em>Mailman Cabal</em>, currently
composed of the following core developers:
<a href="http://www.wooz.org/barry/">Barry Warsaw</a>, Harald
Meland, Ken Manheimer, Scott Cotton, and John Viega. Mailman was
originally written by John Viega.
<p>The Cabal would like to thank the following other developers for
their important contributions (in no particular order): Juan Carlos
Rey Anaya, Victoriano Giralt, Mads Kiilerich, The Dragon De Monsyne,
Timothy O'Malley, Balazs Nagy, Michael Mclay, Greg Stein, Gergely
Madarasz, Andrew Kuchling, Jeff Hahn, Paul Hebble, Christopher
P. Lindsey, Chris Kolar, J C Lawrence, Jeremy Hylton, Nigel
Metheringham, Dan Mick, Jim Tittsler, Ricardo Kustner, Bernhard
Reiter, Thomas Wouters, Jeff Berliner, Ted Cabeen, Michael Yount, Ron
Jarrell, Chris Snell, David Champion, Darrell Fuhriman, Owen Taylor,
Fil, Noam Zeilberger, Mark MERLIN, John A. Martin, Erik Forsberg,
Tanner Lovelace, Les Niles.
<em>We have a extensive wish list and welcome anyone else who would
like to contribute!</em>
<h3>Papers</h3>
<p>A number of papers and other material presented at
<a href="http://www.foretec.com/python/workshops/1998-11/proceedings.html">
the 7th International Python Conference</a> and the 12th Usenix LISA
conference are available <a href="mailman-docs.tar.gz">here</a>.
<h3>Logos</h3>
The Dragon De Monsyne created and donated two logos for Mailman which
you can use to link back to the Mailman website.
<table>
<tr><td><img src="images/logo-sm.jpg"></td>
<td><img src="images/logo-lg.jpg"></td>
</tr><tr><td><center>Small Logo (110x35)</center></td>
<td><center>Large Logo (247x93)</center></td>
</tr>
</table>
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