Chris's Wiki :: blog/tech/UniversityGMail Commentshttps://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/tech/UniversityGMail?atomcommentsDWiki2009-11-11T20:54:53ZRecent comments in Chris's Wiki :: blog/tech/UniversityGMail.From 86.138.106.172 on /blog/tech/UniversityGMailtag:CSpace:blog/tech/UniversityGMail:d2df75927d9a1637bd5baeb8143083d7040ad6e6From 86.138.106.172<div class="wikitext"><p>And second, all that an SLA would do even in theory is let us collect some amount of money from Google, and money is often a poor compensation for a privacy breach.</p>
<p>So when the university is culpable for a privacy breach they will compensate me handsomely?</p>
</div>2009-11-11T20:54:53ZBy Chris Siebenmann on /blog/tech/UniversityGMailtag:CSpace:blog/tech/UniversityGMail:55c85ddfd2cf61afbefa2f0df9f4936abb9f40f6Chris Siebenmann<div class="wikitext"><p>I believe both Google and pine support POP3, although how well they
cooperate is anyone's guess. (It seems peculiar to adopt GMail and
then throw away the often-praised interface, but maybe that's just
me.)</p>
</div>2007-04-23T20:43:37ZFrom 152.14.80.153 on /blog/tech/UniversityGMailtag:CSpace:blog/tech/UniversityGMail:08cb7276e606e4a285a55ab40cc05c071ea7f571From 152.14.80.153<div class="wikitext"><p>I agree with everything you said. I wasn't really suggesting to use gmail for students, just saying it's really nice. Also, I think it would make a university look weak if they can't run their own mail service.
One thing that would be awesome about gmail is if I could somehow access it with pine.. any ideas? (I guess I could have it fetch and leave it one the server)</p>
</div>2007-04-23T16:12:53Z