OPINION

Webmail for tomorrow

By Daily Princetonian Staff
Print article Email article Respond to article
Published: Friday, February 15th, 2008

The start of the semester ushered in a 1GB e-mail quota. This five-fold increase from 200MB starts to address the frustration of students who are incessantly required to delete e-mails from their overflowing inboxes. Nonetheless, the quota remains far below Gmail’s 6 GB limit or Yahoo’s unlimited storage, and students will be able to fully reap the benefits of this larger allotment only when OIT changes the  webmail program.

The current client, Sun Java System Messenger Express 6.2, is riddled with problems. Chief among these is a bug that frequently prevents the program from displaying the e-mail inbox. Students trying to access their e-mail are then forced to reload the page again and again until finally the inbox appears properly. The more messages the folder contains, the more pronounced the problem becomes. Therefore, with an increased e-mail quota, it is likely that more and more students will have trouble accessing their e-mail through Webmail. While using programs like Outlook or Thunderbird is an easy fix to the problem on students’ own computers, this bug remains a great inconvenience to people who want to check their messages from other terminals, be it a friend’s laptop or the web kiosks on the 100-level of Frist Campus Center.

The current webmail client has many other flaws. The program, which was last updated in 2004, is not user-friendly, especially when compared with alternatives that provide the functionality and ease-of-use of desktop applications, such as Thunderbird or Outlook. Webmail's search function and sorting capabilities are particularly unpleasant.

OIT must work with the Information Technology Committee to change the webmail client as quickly as possible to ensure that it is at least on par with the options available for free on the internet today. We welcome the introduction of the 1GB email quota, but it must be only the beginning of an aggressive University effort to ensure that Princeton students are well served by a state-of-the-art email system.

Become a member of The Daily Princetonian's editorial board!  E-mail opinion@dailyprincetonian.com for an application right now!

 

Reader Comments

View all 4 comments on "Webmail for tomorrow".

  • 5:50 p.m. on Feb. 15th, 2008
    Posted by John

    Happy Email User: I agree that asking for more storage space was a bit silly. But I still think that increased storage space (at least in my opinion) isn't addressing the main problems with the client, such as having to constantly reload the webpage in hopes of seeing one's inbox messages. If OIT's upgrades had been major and had addressed problems such as this (and had left smaller issues for later), I would also think the article unappreciative. However, because the OIT upgrades were small and didn't address the more important issues, I think the article's complaints were well justified.

  • 3:45 p.m. on Feb. 15th, 2008
    Posted by Happy Email User

    John: I understood the point of the article - the increase in e-mail was only a small step toward a better e-mail service for the university community. What I was trying to say is that we should be thankful and appreciative for this small step. Instead, the ed-board used this event to try to bring out e-mail improvements that OIT missed. I suppose it could go either way, but I don't think it was appropriate for the ed-board to ask OIT for more improvements right after they expanded our e-mail space. Plus, the ed-board compared our e-mail space to G-Mail's 6 GB. I think that pretty much said, "OIT, you tried, but you didn't do a good job."

Post your comments >