Omniquad Mailwall Enterprise
Protect your organization from all sorts of e-mail threats
Are you inundated with Spam in your e-mail? Troubled by mails that may contain viruses and malicious scripts? Are pornographic and offensive content troubling you? Then you need Omniquad Mailwall to stop Spammers from inundating your mailbox.
Omniquad Mailwall is an e-mail content security management tool. It is designed to identify, analyze and eliminate all types of e-mail threats hazardous to your network environment.
Mailwall acts as a relay between your local mail server and the Internet and as such, Mailwall will intercept all outgoing mail from your local users. All outgoing mails are verified and forwarded to your ISP's SMTP server. Similarly, all incoming mail are first delivered to the Mailwall system by SMTP or POP3 and then routed to your local mail server after being verified. Additionally, you can deploy separate Mailwall systems to specifically handle incoming or outgoing mail. All two-way communications that fail to satisfy policy requirements can be stopped, delayed, quarantined or rejected.
Mailwall Enterprise is compatible with most POP3 e-mail clients such as Microsoft Outlook, Outlook Express, Eudora and Netscape Mail.

System requirements for the software
Server:
- Operating System: Windows 2000 Pro/Server with SP4, Windows XP Pro with SP 2, Windows 2003 Standard, Enterprise, or SMB with SP1
- CPU: 1 GHz Minimum
- Memory: 1 GB Minimum
- Disk Space: 1 GB Minimum
- DB Support: Microsoft SQL Server 2005 Express (.NET 2.0, MDAC 2.8+), Microsoft SQL Server 2000 and 2005
- IE: 6.0 SP1 OR LATER
Client:
- Operating System: Windows 98, 2000 Pro/Server, Windows ME, Windows XP Home, Professional, Tablet, Windows 2003 Standard, Enterprise or SMB
- CPU: 1 GHz Minimum
- Memory: 128 Minimum, 256 MB or better recommended
SLA Promises
- Stops 100% virus
- Stops 95% Spam
- 99.9% uptime
It's also important to remember that the system is doing a very good job of stopping 1000's of virus infected emails and spam that would ordinarily end up in users inbox.
— Steve Titchner, JST Group
