IntroductionWhat is Evolution, and What Can It Do for Me?
Information is useless unless it's organized and accessible;
it's hardly even worth the name if you can't look at it and be
informed.
Evolution's goal is to make the
tasks of storing, organizing, and retrieving your personal
information easier, so you can work and communicate with
others. That is, it's a highly evolved groupware program, an integral
part of the Internet-connected desktop.
Without all the hot air, that means it's a tool to help you
get your work done.
Because it's part of the GNOME project,
Evolution is Free Software. The
program and its source code are released under the terms of
the GNU General
Public License (GPL), and the
documentation falls under the Free Documentation
License (FDL). For more information about
the GPL and the FDL, visit the Free Software Foundation's
website at http://www.fsf.org.
Evolution can help you work in a
group by handling email, address and other contact
information, and one or more calendars. It can do that on one
or several computers, connected directly or over a network,
for one person or for large groups.
The Evolution project has four
central goals:
The application must be both powerful and easy
to use. In other words, it needs a familiar
and intuitive interface that users can customize to their
liking, and users should have access to shortcuts for
complex tasks.
Evolution must meet and
exceed the standards set by other groupware products.
It must include support for major network protocols so that it can
integrate seamlessly with existing hardware and network
environments.
The project must support open standards and be open to
expansion, so that it can become a development platform
as well as an application. From the simplest scripting
to the most complex network and component programming,
Evolution must offer
developers an environment for cutting-edge application
development.
Data must be safe: Evolution
must not lose mail, corrupt mailbox files or other data,
execute arbitrary scripts, or delete files from
your hard disk.
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
Virtual Folders, which let you save searches as though
they were ordinary mail folders.
About This Book
This book is divided into two parts, with several
appendices. The first part is a guided
tour— it will explain how to use
Evolution. If you are new to
Evolution or to groupware in
general, this section is for you. The second section, covering
configuration, is targeted at
more advanced users, but anyone who wants to change the way
Evolution looks or acts can benefit
from reading it.
Typographical conventions
Some kinds of words are marked off with special typography:
ApplicationsCommands typed at the command lineLabels for interface items Menu selections look like this:
MenuSubmenuMenu ItemButtons you can
clickAnything you type
inText
output from a computerWords
that are defined in the .Example Tip
Tips and bits of extra information will look like
this.
Example Example
This is what an example looks like.
Example Warning
This is what a warning looks like.