How many email accounts/addresses are better?
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I do prefer the idea of one email myself and I use mine for multiple purposes. I like the fact that Gmail allows you to add a period somewhere to differentiate between your emails. However, when replying from one of those, it only allows you to reply from your one true email account and that sort of defeats the purpose of using the period. I really wish they'd fix that.
Bassam Abdul-Baki wrote:
it only allows you to reply from your one true email account and that sort of defeats the purpose of using the period. I really wish they'd fix that.
Outlook has something called email alias. But that is buggy too when it comes to replying. Sometimes the from is populated correctly and it fails at at times. Worse yet, on occasions, I have seen the from dropdown is not populated with the aliases properly.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
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The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep! -
The hosting I set up simply forwards all mail to anything@mydomain.com to the same email account So I can happily give people any old email address (I just have to be careful when I reply!) Its a good way of giving the impression that the company is bigger than it is really without having to go to the bother of setting up real email addresses.
MVVM# - See how I did MVVM my way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
_Maxxx_ wrote:
forwards all mail to anything@mydomain.com
A 'catch-all'? But wouldn't that mean getting a lot of spam and junk too?
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
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The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep! -
Although I'm not nearly organized enough to do so, I think that crating several accounts on a personal domain for different purposes makes good sense. Hell, I'm paying for the domain, and it comes with unlimited accounts, so why not use them? Because I'm lazy, says the Magic 8-Ball... :sigh:
Will Rogers never met me.
Roger Wright wrote:
and it comes with unlimited accounts, so why not use them?
Yes. But the prime question is dependency on multiple of these entities on the long run.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
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The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep! -
I've had a few emails over the years. Some I've abandoned, others I've setup to forward to my new email address. Most recently, I have started using Exchange Online and have email setup with my custom domain names. I also have unlimited "aliases", so I have a few different email addresses at a few different domains that I can use to recieve mail. However, I can only send mail from one of them (at a time). For any emails worth keeping, I sort them into folders on my local hard drive, which gets backed up automatically with Time Machine.
AspDotNetDev wrote:
I've had a few emails over the years. Some I've abandoned, others I've setup to forward to my new email address.
I did this exercise a few months back too.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
Tech Gossips
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep! -
_Maxxx_ wrote:
forwards all mail to anything@mydomain.com
A 'catch-all'? But wouldn't that mean getting a lot of spam and junk too?
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
Tech Gossips
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep!Well, if a bot sends mail to aaaaaaaaa@mydomain.com and aaaaaaaaab@mydomain.com etc. then I'll get a lot of copies of the same spam, I guess - but that hasn't happened. I only use the email address for business - and just use different variations (sales@, admin@ etc.) but they all come to me. So far (touch wood!) spam hasn't been a problem at all.
MVVM# - See how I did MVVM my way ___________________________________________ Man, you're a god. - walterhevedeich 26/05/2011 .\\axxx (That's an 'M')
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Today me and a couple of my friends had an interesting discussion during lunch. Just thought would share a snippet of the same. How many email accounts would you consider manageable for an individual. A few perceptions are: 1) One good provider like Yahoo/Google: (a) Labels for individual purposes like Bank, Job/Resumes, Friends, Forums (b) Storage of our own files as attachments in separate labels 2) One separate email for each purpose as listed above. Would you again consider a single provider (I often see this as being monopolized and/or all eggs in the same basket) or depending upon the importance of each label, apportion it among different providers? 3) Backup of an email account to another with a good storage. However care need to be taken that the contents do not go obsolete.. I think more than a Lounge post, this can serve as a CP Survey idea. Nevertheless, just thought would initiate a brainstorming on the same.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
Tech Gossips
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep!I have three primary email addresses. Work - Work stuff Personal - Friends and Family use this, banking Yahoo - which is what I use to sign up for stuff. Which I never ever read. I go in there once a month or so and just delete everything. I do have my own domain and email server sooo. I get to control what gets sent to me as well. Kind of nice that.
To err is human to really mess up you need a computer
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Today me and a couple of my friends had an interesting discussion during lunch. Just thought would share a snippet of the same. How many email accounts would you consider manageable for an individual. A few perceptions are: 1) One good provider like Yahoo/Google: (a) Labels for individual purposes like Bank, Job/Resumes, Friends, Forums (b) Storage of our own files as attachments in separate labels 2) One separate email for each purpose as listed above. Would you again consider a single provider (I often see this as being monopolized and/or all eggs in the same basket) or depending upon the importance of each label, apportion it among different providers? 3) Backup of an email account to another with a good storage. However care need to be taken that the contents do not go obsolete.. I think more than a Lounge post, this can serve as a CP Survey idea. Nevertheless, just thought would initiate a brainstorming on the same.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
Tech Gossips
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep!I use gmail and have personal.l.d.k.p.c.o.g.s and professional.l.d.k.p.c.o.g.s accounts. I keep an account for each of the software technologies I'm interested or proficient and do likewise for personal interests or projects. I have an email address and a SeaMonkey or FireFox profile for each. I set the masterpassword to something familiar for each and let the password remembrel do it's thing. This works for me.
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I use gmail and have personal.l.d.k.p.c.o.g.s and professional.l.d.k.p.c.o.g.s accounts. I keep an account for each of the software technologies I'm interested or proficient and do likewise for personal interests or projects. I have an email address and a SeaMonkey or FireFox profile for each. I set the masterpassword to something familiar for each and let the password remembrel do it's thing. This works for me.
Michael T. Bee [ITProf Sempris] wrote:
I have an email address and a SeaMonkey or FireFox profile for each. I set the masterpassword to something familiar for each and let the password remembrel do it's thing.
For me, a separate Todolist (ToDoList 6.6.4 Feature Release - An effective and flexible way to keep on top of your tasks[^]) file maintains the passwords and accounts. Optionally the encrypt plugin comes in handy when sharing it between computers through email attachments.
Michael T. Bee [ITProf Sempris] wrote:
l.d.k.p.c.o.g.s
Is this an acronym for something?
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
Tech Gossips
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep! -
Michael T. Bee [ITProf Sempris] wrote:
I have an email address and a SeaMonkey or FireFox profile for each. I set the masterpassword to something familiar for each and let the password remembrel do it's thing.
For me, a separate Todolist (ToDoList 6.6.4 Feature Release - An effective and flexible way to keep on top of your tasks[^]) file maintains the passwords and accounts. Optionally the encrypt plugin comes in handy when sharing it between computers through email attachments.
Michael T. Bee [ITProf Sempris] wrote:
l.d.k.p.c.o.g.s
Is this an acronym for something?
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
Tech Gossips
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep!life.domain.kingdom.phyla.class.order.genus.species...
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Today me and a couple of my friends had an interesting discussion during lunch. Just thought would share a snippet of the same. How many email accounts would you consider manageable for an individual. A few perceptions are: 1) One good provider like Yahoo/Google: (a) Labels for individual purposes like Bank, Job/Resumes, Friends, Forums (b) Storage of our own files as attachments in separate labels 2) One separate email for each purpose as listed above. Would you again consider a single provider (I often see this as being monopolized and/or all eggs in the same basket) or depending upon the importance of each label, apportion it among different providers? 3) Backup of an email account to another with a good storage. However care need to be taken that the contents do not go obsolete.. I think more than a Lounge post, this can serve as a CP Survey idea. Nevertheless, just thought would initiate a brainstorming on the same.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
Tech Gossips
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep!Like you I have 4 or 5 accounts created for specific purposes. And a few years back I created one 'shared' gmail account (with my son) which we NEVER use. In fact, if the inbox gets a message we know the gmail sold or breached the address somehow (hasn't happened yet). It's sole purpose is to host 'draft messages' in which we communicate sensitive info we don't want to chance in normal email transmissions. If you never touch the 'send' button, ears are never alerted. It may sound a bit paranoid, but it works as intended. BTW, I got the idea from a movie 10 or more years ago - just can't remember which one.
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Today me and a couple of my friends had an interesting discussion during lunch. Just thought would share a snippet of the same. How many email accounts would you consider manageable for an individual. A few perceptions are: 1) One good provider like Yahoo/Google: (a) Labels for individual purposes like Bank, Job/Resumes, Friends, Forums (b) Storage of our own files as attachments in separate labels 2) One separate email for each purpose as listed above. Would you again consider a single provider (I often see this as being monopolized and/or all eggs in the same basket) or depending upon the importance of each label, apportion it among different providers? 3) Backup of an email account to another with a good storage. However care need to be taken that the contents do not go obsolete.. I think more than a Lounge post, this can serve as a CP Survey idea. Nevertheless, just thought would initiate a brainstorming on the same.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
Tech Gossips
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep!If you ignore the email accounts that come "bundled" with using their service (e.g. I have a yahoo email because I have a yahoo account, but I don't use it for email).. - A main account (personal correspondence, trusted sites) - One for untrusted (potential spam sources, throw away registrations) - One for anonymous (things I don't want [too obviously] associated with "me" by email address) - Domain registration (not putting my real address into WHOIS) - Temporary site-specific spam-check address(es) (for "unknown" sites that I'd rather use my main account, but need to see if I get spam first) - Maybe a few others if I need a second account on some site (which requires a unique email)
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Today me and a couple of my friends had an interesting discussion during lunch. Just thought would share a snippet of the same. How many email accounts would you consider manageable for an individual. A few perceptions are: 1) One good provider like Yahoo/Google: (a) Labels for individual purposes like Bank, Job/Resumes, Friends, Forums (b) Storage of our own files as attachments in separate labels 2) One separate email for each purpose as listed above. Would you again consider a single provider (I often see this as being monopolized and/or all eggs in the same basket) or depending upon the importance of each label, apportion it among different providers? 3) Backup of an email account to another with a good storage. However care need to be taken that the contents do not go obsolete.. I think more than a Lounge post, this can serve as a CP Survey idea. Nevertheless, just thought would initiate a brainstorming on the same.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
Tech Gossips
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep!I honestly do not know how many Email accounts I have. I own my own domain and control all the Email going to it. I use one account (me[at]KenGunther.com) as my primary account, all personal and business Email that I really want to keep track of goes there. This is the only account that goes to my phone. If I want to temporarily keep track of a mailbox I will tell the server to forward all mail to that mailbox to my me[at]KenGunther.com mailbox. I have additional mailboxes for often used purposes (e.g. my ham radio club, yahoo groups, etc) and have accounts for these mailboxes in my Email client so they will all appear together. I may use filter rules on my Email client to further sort/prioritize Email in these accounts. I give many people a unique address for me (e.g. dentist[at]KenGunther.com for my dentist). All of these Email addresses will be collected by my Email program in one catchall mailbox. I can quickly go through today's new entries in the catchall mailbox to see if there is anything of interest (I can use my my Email client to tag important ones in a different color). This may see overly completed but it works for me. It allows me to quickly find the Emails I am most interested in and quickly identify how a spammer got my Email address. Ken G.
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Today me and a couple of my friends had an interesting discussion during lunch. Just thought would share a snippet of the same. How many email accounts would you consider manageable for an individual. A few perceptions are: 1) One good provider like Yahoo/Google: (a) Labels for individual purposes like Bank, Job/Resumes, Friends, Forums (b) Storage of our own files as attachments in separate labels 2) One separate email for each purpose as listed above. Would you again consider a single provider (I often see this as being monopolized and/or all eggs in the same basket) or depending upon the importance of each label, apportion it among different providers? 3) Backup of an email account to another with a good storage. However care need to be taken that the contents do not go obsolete.. I think more than a Lounge post, this can serve as a CP Survey idea. Nevertheless, just thought would initiate a brainstorming on the same.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
Tech Gossips
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep!Difficult to count - depends upon how you count them. I use a few domains with catch-all's set to a few real accounts. I have, in fact, never disclosed the real addresses to anyone I know. The first of these allows me to create email addresses on the fly so that I can know who sent me something and where the address came from (i.e., who sold me out). If it becomes a problem I redirect the address back to the source or other awkward target for the sender. These catch-all seeking addresses are frequently disposable use-once affairs. There are a number of fixed addresses (which I can therefore split to more than one target address). By not disclosing my true email addresses I avoid two problems: (1) unstoppable spamming to the account and (2) being able to change my email address (or internet provider) without bothering to worry where my mail will go: just change the forward target. So, by now, I've accumulated hundreds of catch-all type addresses and a few real targets. Management is surprisingly easy. Spam virtually non-existent.
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein
"As far as we know, our computer has never had an undetected error." - Weisert
"If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you are seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010
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Today me and a couple of my friends had an interesting discussion during lunch. Just thought would share a snippet of the same. How many email accounts would you consider manageable for an individual. A few perceptions are: 1) One good provider like Yahoo/Google: (a) Labels for individual purposes like Bank, Job/Resumes, Friends, Forums (b) Storage of our own files as attachments in separate labels 2) One separate email for each purpose as listed above. Would you again consider a single provider (I often see this as being monopolized and/or all eggs in the same basket) or depending upon the importance of each label, apportion it among different providers? 3) Backup of an email account to another with a good storage. However care need to be taken that the contents do not go obsolete.. I think more than a Lounge post, this can serve as a CP Survey idea. Nevertheless, just thought would initiate a brainstorming on the same.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar Personal Homepage
Tech Gossips
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, But I have promises to keep, And miles to go before I sleep, And miles to go before I sleep!This is the rough breakdown of email addresses that I use regularily: 5 @ domain = ISP (used by family) [several with aliases] 1 @ domain = professional body I'm a member of (had this since '95) (3 aliases) 1 @ domain = company that I work for (1 alias) 1 @ domain = main client 4 @ domain = bought for home use, not tied to ISP (for use by family and automated services, e.g. NAS enclosure) 2 @ domain = bought for public development work 1 @ domain = charity that I help at I sometime create additional accounts on domains that I administer for use with temporary projects (e.g. sending holiday snaps from public places, entering competitions that might get spam responses). I have auto-forwarded the professional and development addresses to my company email, and collect ISP and home use together as a group in Outlook at home. I have a set of personal guidelines about which people are told which address.