Virtual OS/2 International Consumer Education
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May 2002

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Pegasus email client running under ODIN

By Vaughn Bender © May 2002

I work for a medium size school division. At present our email client is based on Netscape 4.79 for windows throughout. I have been searching for a cheap (As education usually is)low cost if not free email client for all 800+ Win9x workstations. My goal here is to get the browser and mail client separate. Netscape is the only application we are supporting at the moment for both browser and email but is now becoming undesirable for several issues. I was looking for an email client did not have any advertising banners. Eudora and Opera have those annoying banners till you purchase it so unless the school division would spend the money, that are not an option. I also was looking for a cross platform package like PMMail but it was too expensive to purchase for that many computers though I personally think Pmmail is an excellent cross platform email client package. Ideally I could support it from my eCS system at work. In my search for a cheap email package a tech from a neighboring school division told me of a win32 email client that is free from all advertising and supports multiple email ids in one package on a single workstation. I went to the site http://www.pmail.com and downloaded Pegasus 4.01.

Pegasus is a win32 app that is supported on win9x, NT/W2k/Xp. I was told that they make their money on the email client by purchasing their hard copy manual. You are not required to purchase one but it helps it we are thinking of using it and supporting it. It is rich in features.

Well, I installed Pegasus on my IBM Thinkpad running Windows XP and the install was easy and it detected that I was on a Novell network and asked me if I wanted Netware support. I thought that was cool so I accepted. After the initial install I ran the app and it prompted me for the usual POP and SMTP information. It seemed to be the product we were looking for in the school division PLUS it was Netware aware. Pegasus recognizes Novell NDS and can be setup so that no matter what workstation you login to, your email and address book follow you.

A couple of weeks had passed since I tried it on my laptop. My desktop PC has only eCS installed on it and I had just updated my Odin with the latest build (this was a weekly build from the beginning of February) and thought hey why don't I try to install Pegasus through Odin. The win32k.sys driver was installed, so OS/2 was able to see win32 programs as executable. So I went to my network drive on the Netware server and double clicked on the Pegasus file and it loaded the first install screen with winzip extractor. I clicked on setup and started the installation process. Hey no problems so far. My next window screen was the Welcome to Pegasus Mail so I simply clicked next to start the install.

Install Pegasus Mail

The next screen brings you to where you want to install Pegasus. I have a separate JFS partition where I install my win32 apps installed with Odin so I clicked on the browse button. Browsing to your desired directory seem to work well. I was able to click on the desired directory on my JFS partition.

Choose a Directory

I added Pegasus4 to the drive and directory that I had chosen and clicked on the next button one last time and it started the install. Just moments later the Pegasus install screen disappeared. I thought oh great it was not going to work and it just collapsed and that was the end of it but about 20 seconds or more later the finish screen popped up indicating that the install was a success.

Next I went to the drive and folder where Pegasus was installed and looked for the executable that starts it. I found it difficult to determine what file it was. It was not that obvious as there were several exe's to choose from. So I choose the most logical choice "winpm-32.exe" and right clicked on it and clicked "create program object" on the desktop . Then I labeled it Pegasus 4.01 and tossed it in my win32apps folder. I opened that folder and double clicked on it. The initial screen came up. I guess I had chosen the right exe! The screen prompts you with three buttons to choose from. You can create a single mail ID. You can also create multiple ID's on the same system or that last option lets you from what I could understand run it as a network app. For this article I choose the first option and installed it as a single user on one machine.

Setting Up Mailboxes

After choosing the first option, the next window that came up asked you where you want to put your mail directory. The program defaults to C:\PMAIL\MAIL. I have a data directory so I pathed it on my JFS volume to a pmail sub directory. Finally I clicked "OK" and the program was up and running on my desktop. The last step you need to take is to setup the POP and SMTP and user ID. On the top menu click on "File" and choose option "Network Configuration". At this point you have two options, the first option is simply fill in the tabs with your email id and POP and SMTP information or click on "Start Setup Wizard" and fill out the prompts. Either way both accomplishes the same goals to fill out the email ID.

Internet Mail Options

I choose the Wizard and simply filled in the information and when it was done I was brought back to the initial "Network Configuration" menu. All the while I was doing installing and running through the setup screens I experience no screen refresh problems, no glitches whatsoever. The only trouble I had was my system became unresponsive the first time I started Pegasus. I was able to kill it with "Watchcat". After the initial problem, Pegasus ran without any issues. At work I run it with multiple email ids on a single computer. I have no troubles with that option either. I tried sending a couple of emails to myself. Both send and receive worked with no trouble. This package will not be my main email program to use. I will continue to use Pmmail/2 as I have always. But to be able to bring it up on my eCS workstation at work will enable me to provide phone support for Pegasus to all teaching staff in the schools. The win32 support that Odin provides has enabled me to accomplish what I need to do. Thanks to all the developers that work hard to develop Odin.

References:
Pegasus 4.01
Developer: Pegasus Mail by David Harris- http://www.pmail.com/
Price: Free

Other links referenced:
  ODIN, Freeware - http://odin.netlabs.org


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