![]() ![]() The important configuration is in davmail to use the correct owa server. Then it forwards that through localhost with custom ports, allowing you to connect with imap using the client of your choice.Īfter configuring Davmail, Mailspring could connect with IMAP like a charm. So, I turned to my good old friend google and found DavMail.ĭavmail is a small program that runs on your desktop and connects to Exchange. Thunderbird has a really bad and dated ui. Anyway, I don’t like the UI in Evolution and the main reason I use linux and not Mac, or *shudder* windows, is so that I can have EVERYTHING exactly the way I want it. Evolution is supposed to support exchange but I couldn’t manage to authenticate. Hiri was built for exchange and does support it very well, but it ONLY supports exchange, aside from being paid. There are a few email apps on linux that do support exchange. ![]() The problem in my case was that the boys down in IT didn’t know anything about it, least of all how to grant access and the details I would need to connect. The easy solution is to simply connect using IMAP and SMTP. A quick google search led to me Mailspring’s github, where the folks say Exchange support has been on the roadmap since 2017. But Lo and Behold, when I went to add the new account in Mailspring like I do with my gmail accounts, it simply did not work. My company recently shifted to working with exchange, and I got a new email address, using Exchange. Mailspring does not yet support Microsoft Exchange email accounts.Įnter Me. There is only one really big issue with Mailspring so far, but it’s a dealbreaker. I mentioned Mailspring, the Email client I use to replace Outlook. This post is kinda sorta a logical continuation to one of my recent posts, where I talk about using linux as a modern and powerful daily-driver desktop OS in 2020. An adventure in getting my work email account on linux, the way I Want it. ![]()
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