Djigzo

Djigzo 2.5.0

Djigzo email encryption gateway is an email server (MTA) that encrypts and decrypts your incoming and outgoing email. As it works like a general SMTP server, Djigzo is compatible with regular email clients and can work with the already existing email...

dlvr

dlvr 0.2

dlvr is a tool that provides email sending for humans.Installationwith pip as easy as: pip install dlvror checkout the latest version from github: git clone https://github.com/bmaeser/dlvr.git cd dlvr python setup.py...

DSPAM

DSPAM 3.10.0

DSPAM is a scalable and open-source content-based spam filter designed for multi-user enterprise systems. On a properly configured system, many users experience results between 99.5% - 99.95%, or one error for every 200 to 2000 messages. DSPAM supports...

duxlot

duxlot 0.9.21-1653

Duxlot is an IRC chat bot that features modularity, a fast multiprocess based architecture, and it is very easy to use.Except Python 3, Duxlot has no other dependencies, and the best of all is that is works without installation as a...

dxirc

dxirc 1.00.0

dxirc is a simple yet capable cross-platform IRC client written in C++ and FOX toolkit. Why use several different clients when you can have the same one on Linux (e.g. Ubuntu, OpenSUSE, Arch Linux), *BSD (e.g. DesktopBSD) or even Windows?Why Another IRC...

E-MailRelay is a simple SMTP proxy and relay MTA, written in C++, for Linux and Windows. When running as a proxy all e-mail messages can be passed through a user-defined program, such as a spam filter, which can drop, re-address or edit messages as they...

EarwigBot

EarwigBot 0.1

EarwigBot is a Python robot that edits Wikipedia and interacts with people over IRC. This file provides a basic overview of how to install and setup the bot; more detailed information is located in the docs/ directory (available online at...

EFZP

EFZP 0.1

EFZP is a module to describe an email in terms of salutation, body, signature, reply text etc.EFZP turns this..."Hi Dave,\nLets meet up this Tuesday\nCheers, Tom\n\nOn Sunday, 15 May 2011 at 5:02 PM, Dave Trindall wrote: Hey...