Introduction What is Evolution, and What Can It Do for Me?
The word "evolution" means "a process of improvement and
development." The GNOME application
Evolution is meant to be a more
evolved groupware program, and an
integral part of the Internet-connected desktop.
Evolution is a suite of tools to
help you work in a group. You can use it to send, receive,
and organize email, manage address and other contact
information, and maintain a calendar. It enables you to do
those things on one or several computers, connected directly
or over a network, for one person or for large groups.
Evolution can handle almost all
your communications tasks with the power and flexibility of
the GNOME desktop environment.
The developers of Evolution had
four major goals for their project:
The application must be both powerful and easy
to use. That means a familiar and intuitive
interface that users could customize to their liking, and
the development of shortcuts for complex tasks.
Evolution must meet and
exceed the standards set by other groupware products.
It must include support for most major network protocols
so that it can integrate seamlessly with existing
hardware and network environments.
The project must support open standards and protocols
to turn Evolution into an
advanced development platform. From the simplest
scripting to the most complex network and component
programming, Evolution
needed to offer developers an environment for
cutting-edge application development.
Data must be safe: Evolution
must not lose mail or corrupt mailbox files.
Evolution is designed to make most
daily tasks faster. For example, it takes only one or two
clicks to enter an appointment or an address card sent to you
by email, or to send email to a contact or appointment.
Evolution makes displays faster and
more efficient, so searches are faster and memory usage is
lower. People who get lots of mail will appreciate advanced
features like vFolders, which
let you save searches as though they were ordinary mail
folders.
About This Book
This version of the Evolution
User's Guide is a draft. It is missing
huge chunks of information, and many of the features it
describes are unimplemented. All the content is subject to
change, especially if you help. Please send comments on the
guide to aaron@helixcode.com. Items that are
known to need action are indicated as such, often with
notation like (INSERT CONTENT HERE). If you would like to
work on the guide please contact me or see the GNOME
Documentation project web site. This
paragraph will be removed in later versions of the manual.
This book is divided into two sections. The first section is
a guided tour— it will
explain how to use Evolution. If
you are new to Evolution or to
groupware in general, this is the section for you. The second
section, covering configuration,
is targeted at advanced users and administrators. If you are
a network administrator, you may find yourself referring to
this section frequently.
Typographical conventions
Some kinds of words are marked off with special typography.
It's listed below:
ApplicationsCommands typed at the command lineLabels for menu items and buttonsAnything you type inText output from a computer