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YAM (software)
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== History == The initial release from 1995 arrived when the Internet was still something very new for the average Amiga user. However, as time passed and further 1.x updates were released, YAM became quickly popular thanks to its simplicity and comprehensible user interface<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hough.ca/personal/reviews/yam12.html|author=Adam Hough|title=YAM (Yet Another Mailer) v1.2 Review|work=Computer Equipment and Software Reviews|date=July 1996}}</ref> at a time when competing products were either German only (MicroDot), required a shareware fee (MicroDot-II) or used a less intuitive GUI in comparison, such as [[Thor (program)|Thor]].<ref>[http://www.totalamiga.org/pdf/totalamiga_3.pdf Total Amiga Magazine - Emailer roundup]</ref> The early YAM 1.x series, while very usable for the most part, was relatively basic and spartan in terms of functionality.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.hough.ca/personal/reviews/yam13.html|author=Adam Hough|title=Yet Another Mailer 1.3 (YAM) Review|work=Computer Equipment and Software Reviews|date=August 1996}}</ref> It wasn't until 2.0 that finally the program started showing its full potential, featuring a major redesign of the user interface and a plethora of new features<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/19980630084423/http://www.yam.ch:80/future.html The original YAM homepage showing the highlights of release 2.0 (archived)]</ref> which turned it into the de facto standard Amiga E-mail client ever since. Released in late 2000, YAM 2.2 was the last update from Marcel Beck, who ceased Amiga development but also released the sources<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20010219130224/http://www.yam.ch:80/yamos.html Official announcement of YAM becoming open source and inviting interested developers to join the YAM Open Source team]</ref> under the [[GNU General Public License|GNU GPL-2.0-or-later]]. A group of Amiga developers then teamed up to coordinate and resume development, and finally in 2004 the first ever open source YAM (2.3) was released. During the next decade YAM managed to become a much more mature, stable and usable program. Along that time however, the developer team also lost most of its members, but YAM still remains today as one of the most iconic and popular pieces of Amiga software. In February 2017, a development version of YAM 2.10 was publicly made available which was adapted to use AmiSSL v4 to give YAM up to date SSL support. This was further updated in July 2022, integrating AmiSSL v5 support and in March 2024 with a further SSL related improvement. Development of YAM 2.10 continues at the YAM Open Source Team's official repository, working towards a full public release, once remaining issues have been resolved. In October 2024, AmigaKit Ltd released an own version of a fork of YAM<ref>https://wiki.amiga.org/index.php/YAM</ref> using the GitHub published source code to create "YAM (68K/A600GS)". Their version 2.10 was released for their A600GS computer system. A few minor bugs were fixed to workaround A600GS issues and the logo was refreshed. A subsequent maintenance release of version 2.10 was released by AmigaKit on 28 February 2025 for the A600GS and A1200NG computer systems. However, as AmigaKit did not release their changes to the public (either via GitHub or in a separate source code archive) there have been certain disputs on wheter AmigaKit Ltd is actually violating the OpenSource GPL license terms YAM was originally released/maintained. In addition, even thought they falsely assume that public YAM OpenSource development was stopped, they in fact never contacted the original authors or did start a public discussion on how to proceed with the slowed down YAM development.
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