Turnpike (software)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Turnpike is a software suite for Microsoft Windows, originally written by Chris Hall and Richard Clayton. The suite, which comprises an email client and a news client, was acquired by Demon Internet in 1995 and supplied to their customers free of charge. It also has a small following of non-Demon users. Its advocates claim it to be more straightforward to use and less buggy than the equivalent Microsoft product. The current version is version 6.07, the first that will run successfully under Vista; further major revision is unlikely.

The suite consists of two principal components, Connect, which interfaces with the modem driver or LAN, and Turnpike, which controls, sorts and displays mail and email. Prior to version 6 the Turnpike component was a stand-alone executable whilst from version 6 onwards it is implemented as a Windows Shell namespace extension. Mail filtering can be done using Unix-like regular expressions.

Versions 4 and beyond were 32-bit, and early versions of 5 included PGP.

Although no Linux port was produced, all versions work satisfactorily under packages such as Win4Lin and VMware. Versions up to and including 5 also work quite well under Wine, but the Windows Explorer integration of Turnpike 6 has proved difficult to use in this way.

There is an active support newsgroup: demon.ip.support turnpike. In spite of its name, this is not restricted to Demon customers; it is made available to all news servers that wish to take it, and can also be found on Google groups.