if you can do the domain and hosting yourself, great
Yah, yah . . . I do most of my stuff with my own domain(s).
Still, I retain some gmail accounts, and they serve their purpose.
Enjoy your (de)crepitude, OldCorpse
if you can do the domain and hosting yourself, great
I’ve been using Fastmail for over a year and I’ve been very happy with them.Another reason I want to move away from gmail is privacy. The amount of stuff google collects about you is scary. And to use gmail you need to be logged into it your google account, which I've found allows google to track stuff that has nothing to do with your emails.
Also, I'm currently doing performance testing on fastmail vs. icloud vs. gmail, and my preliminary resuts, at least, are that fastmail is significantly faster than both (at least for receiving emails; I haven't tested sending yet).
preliminary resuts, at least,
I know, I'm sorry, didn't mean to promote gmail. Being a corpse has the advantage that I get to test things looooooong term, and sometimes things surprise you, like gmail working for me.Yah, yah . . . I do most of my stuff with my own domain(s).
Still, I retain some gmail accounts, and they serve their purpose.
Enjoy your (de)crepitude, OldCorpse
I'm sorry
give up all digital activities (and not even then!
I thought about this, and it doesn't work. I need a simple email address to give to people and businesses that's unlikely to be misunderstood (that's why you always want your email address to end in .com, since people mindlessly use that as the default).
I picked [other-me].info back in the day when I was geek'ed to the proper use of TLD's, and I sometimes find that it's a job to vocally submit my email to businesses.
Sometimes it's a tennis-match of a dialogue; other-times, I can just type it in.
I thought about this, and it doesn't work. I need a simple email address to give to people and businesses that's unlikely to be misunderstood (that's why you always want your email address to end in .com, since people mindlessly use that as the default).
Plus I nearly always send my emails as myself (I do have some anoymous accounts, but I only use those under special circumstances). And Fastmail happens to have my last name available. So let's suppose my last name were "Baker". Thus Fastmail essentially has "baker@fastmail.com" available. So all I need to spell out is Baker.
But with theorist9 it's much more cumbersome. Then instead of "baker@fastmail.com" it becomes "baker@theorist9.com", so there's lots more I need to spell out over the phone, plus much more chance of a transcription error.
And I think you get this yourself:
Futher, I can't use theorist9 in any case, since that blows the anonymity of having theorist9 as my online identity--if my domain were theorist9, every time I sent out an email as me, I'd also be announcing I'm theorist9.
So yeah, if [my first name].com or [my last name].com were available, I might go for it, since then I could do "baker@baker.com". But they're not.
I can't use theorist9 in any case, since that blows the anonymity of having theorist9 as my online identity--if my domain were theorist9, every time I sent out an email as me, I'd also be announcing I'm theorist9
I should return the favor for all this pestering, by pestering you to get a proper monitor .It's theorist9 who needs to get hir act together, and get a proper domain
I should return the favor for all this pestering, by pestering you to get a proper monitor .
Your Dell P2715K's are nice, and work beautifully as side-monitors. But for your central display—the one you spend most of your time staring at—a 5k glossy Retina display is so much nicer, particularly if you're mostly doing text work.
I know this, because I'm using a 27" Retina iMac side-by-side with a Dell P2715Q.
Locally, I've seen the glossy ASD used on Craig's List, in perfect condition and with AC+, for $820—which means it could probably be had for $750.
Of course, you should really make at least one of those lazy display engines in your M2 Max do some real work, and get an XDR....
Is the idea that alias accounts eventually fill up with junk, and when that happens you just delete them and move on, while you can't do that with your true account?I have never had a problem with iCloud email. The trick is not not give out your personal address and use alias acconnts most of the time.
That is my modus operandi and has worked well. I like the fact that I can also remove an alias and stop further emails on the alias.Is the idea that alias accounts eventually fill up with junk, and when that happens you just delete them and move on, while you can't do that with your true account?
EDIT: Apple Support just told me that it is not possible to create general iCloud email aliases--they said that you can only create and use aliases within the Apple Mail app (which I don't use). Thus those aliases wouldn't be usable in Outlook, which is my email app.That is my modus operandi and has worked well. I like the fact that I can also remove an alias and stop further emails on the alias.
Yes, you can. Create in Apple Mail and use anywhere.Can you create iCloud aliases that can be used anywhere (like normal email aliases)?
I ask because I checked Apple's support docs, and they only say how to create iCloud aliases within the Apple Mail app—and I need aliases that I can instead use anywhere, particularly in Outlook.
I'm on the phone with Apple Support for another issue, so I just asked them that as well--they're checking now.
Gmail FTW (just kidding!).Well, I encountered one practice from Fastmail (FM) that I don't like. During my testing, I sent four emails from my FM acct to to my work account. Two arrived immediately, and two arrived 11 hours later.
I asked FM to investigate and, after reviewing the headers, they informed me FM does routine spam holds on emails from accounts during the first month to ensure the account is not being use for spam.
That's understandable—but what's unacceptable is they do this to paying customers without informing them of the practice. I only caught this because I was sending the emails to myself. But if a customer sends a time-sensitive email during the first month, and it's held for half a day, there's no way they would know.
I told them FM needs to be more transparent about this practice. At the least, they need to include that info. in the "new customer" email. Further, in the longer term, they should add a notification mechanism where the sender is informed of any emails put under hold.