Published by Jon Copas on 30 Jan 2008 at 11:09 pm
My E-Mail Solution
E-Mail addresses are today’s de facto communication method. It’s how we keep in touch with friends and co-workers it is important that your e-mail address says what you want it to say about you. Reading something more into a e-mail address is something we all do, if you see an @yahoo.com address on a business card it better be from someone who works at Yahoo.
Below is how I handle e-mail it may not be the best way but it has worked well for me for several years. This is how you can have a nearly unlimited number of e-mail address and only ever have to check one.
- Get a domain name. I use 1and1 for all the hosting I need and don’t have means to do at home. You can get your domain name and e-mail forwarding and thats is all you need for this. Starting at $1 a month (50% off for the first 3 months). I even host this site and many others at 1and1. I have a “my first and last name.com” and a nice domain name with my family name in it specifically for e-mail reasons.
- Set up a master account. The address is unimportant since you wont be giving it out to anyone, but what is important is the interface. I prefer a Gmail account, it is free, has a wonderful interface and uses its massive member database to detect spam e-mail amazingly well. With a nearly limitless number of e-mail addresses pointed at your master address a powerful spam filter is important. I hardly hear a whisper of spam on my master account.
- Set up your forwards. In the 1and1 control panel (as with most other providers) you can set up a *@DomainName.com e-mail address to forward to your master e-mail address. This will send all mail to that domain to the master account.
- Set up your FROM address. Gmail will allow you to setup multiple “Send As” addresses. Go to Settings>Accounts>Send Mail As. I set up an Admin@ Webmaster@ me@ and so on for the various domains. So I can send mail as any prefix on a domain I own that I want to at that time.
This entire process should take no more than an hour and should be very easy to do.
Whats the upside?
- Being able to tell anyone your e-mail address is TheirName@YourName.com is cool and gets fun looks. People tend to remember that kind of thing.
- Giving a specific address to a site you register for allows you to keep track of who sold you out to a spam list. If a forum asks you to register you can give it the address ForumName@YourName.com and be able to back that up with an authorization response.
- If a specific address starts getting an abundance of unblocked spam you can always set up a filter to block that address.
If you don’t have the desire to go through the above, services like 10 Minute Mail and BugMeNot offer a quick, easy and perfectly acceptable solution to the spam address problem. But I like my way a lot better.
Da Commentah on 11 Apr 2008 at 12:57 am #
this is the only website I visit regularly, because most of my friends hang out here and have a lot of fun