Non-permanent, but worth considering, especially if you'd like to 'coddle' your respondents over to your new email address:
Ask your current ISP how much they charge to keep your current email address 'alive', while you 'sleep' your other network services subscription 'for a while'. The ones I am familiar with range from a coupla bux or so .. commonly $5/month.
You should then, at least, be able to access the Old stuff via WebMail. They can direct you to their help pages on how use your favourite browser to work that kind of email.
I don't happen to like WebMail much. So I would also ask ISP if they allow you to make POP connections from outside their network. If that goes well, then you want them to tell you how 'secure' your login authentication will be. Some POP logins still send parts of your login info 'in the clear' - leaving you as easy pickins for man-in-the-middle sniffers.
If you like their security, then you can run an email client like Thunderbird. It can be set to fetch from more than one host, to common inbox, or to separate folder hierarchies. If you elect to run an email client on more than one station, no matter the client, I would suggest you find the checkbox called "Leave mail on server", and do that on ALL clients. This allows a wide window of time for you to fetch on each machine; with none of them doing their fetching, then telling the upstream email server "I'm the boss of all this email, and I've got my copy of it all, so Delete everything up 'til Now." Should even one client be set to NOT leave mail on server, your other stations will not be able to be synch'd - they would be missing certain emails, deleted by the bossy station on its last fetch.
These methods can buy you time to study your various options in committing to a long-term 'permanent' email address.
Once you've established the New email address, make sure to set your ReplyTo when using the Old email - set it to refer to the New addy.
Separately (again, once a new addy is established), you can also ask your Old ISP if they can work the old, tried&true .forward ("dot forward"), where Old-addressed email continues to 'arrive' at your Old email host, but is re-directed to whatever you've set up as your New email.
These approaches can be helpful during the transition to a new email, and will allow you numerous opportunities to nudge your respondents to update their address books. Most people need more than a few proddings to actually go into their own addressbook, and edit/update their entry on You. After 'enough' attempts, some will still just go into their existing emails From you, and do a Reply, because .. well .. just because people are like that. Your clever setting of the New ReplyTo will eventually be 'in' the old emails they will reach for, and that's the best we can do, for folks like that.
Eventually, you retire the old account, and if anybody gets upset at their 'bounce' msgs .. you can blame it on their own .. naahh .. blame it on me.
smiles, John D _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
On Wed, 2014-07-09 at 12:00 -0500, roundtable-request@muug.mb.ca wrote:
Send Roundtable mailing list submissions to roundtable@muug.mb.ca
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When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Roundtable digest..." Today's Topics:
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- Re: permanent email address (John Lange)
- Re: permanent email address (Hartmut W Sager)
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Just to clear up a common misconception on the topic of web-mail/gmail; most people assume you have to use the web interface to access gmail. This is not the case, you can use Outlook via IMAP if you want. And once you move your domain to gmail all messages are sent from your domain (not user@gmail.com).
Gmail also lets you suck in all your old email messages if you want. There are a few approaches to this depending on where you have your old mail stored. I used IMAP to pull in all my old email from my personal email server before I shut it down. I have archives on gmail going back to 1999.
John
On Thu, Jul 10, 2014 at 2:30 AM, JD jd@wcgwave.ca wrote:
Non-permanent, but worth considering, especially if you'd like to 'coddle' your respondents over to your new email address:
Ask your current ISP how much they charge to keep your current email address 'alive', while you 'sleep' your other network services subscription 'for a while'. The ones I am familiar with range from a coupla bux or so .. commonly $5/month.
You should then, at least, be able to access the Old stuff via WebMail. They can direct you to their help pages on how use your favourite browser to work that kind of email.
I don't happen to like WebMail much. So I would also ask ISP if they allow you to make POP connections from outside their network. If that goes well, then you want them to tell you how 'secure' your login authentication will be. Some POP logins still send parts of your login info 'in the clear' - leaving you as easy pickins for man-in-the-middle sniffers.
If you like their security, then you can run an email client like Thunderbird. It can be set to fetch from more than one host, to common inbox, or to separate folder hierarchies. If you elect to run an email client on more than one station, no matter the client, I would suggest you find the checkbox called "Leave mail on server", and do that on ALL clients. This allows a wide window of time for you to fetch on each machine; with none of them doing their fetching, then telling the upstream email server "I'm the boss of all this email, and I've got my copy of it all, so Delete everything up 'til Now." Should even one client be set to NOT leave mail on server, your other stations will not be able to be synch'd - they would be missing certain emails, deleted by the bossy station on its last fetch.
These methods can buy you time to study your various options in committing to a long-term 'permanent' email address.
Once you've established the New email address, make sure to set your ReplyTo when using the Old email - set it to refer to the New addy.
Separately (again, once a new addy is established), you can also ask your Old ISP if they can work the old, tried&true .forward ("dot forward"), where Old-addressed email continues to 'arrive' at your Old email host, but is re-directed to whatever you've set up as your New email.
These approaches can be helpful during the transition to a new email, and will allow you numerous opportunities to nudge your respondents to update their address books. Most people need more than a few proddings to actually go into their own addressbook, and edit/update their entry on You. After 'enough' attempts, some will still just go into their existing emails From you, and do a Reply, because .. well .. just because people are like that. Your clever setting of the New ReplyTo will eventually be 'in' the old emails they will reach for, and that's the best we can do, for folks like that.
Eventually, you retire the old account, and if anybody gets upset at their 'bounce' msgs .. you can blame it on their own .. naahh .. blame it on me.
smiles, John D _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
On Wed, 2014-07-09 at 12:00 -0500, roundtable-request@muug.mb.ca wrote:
Send Roundtable mailing list submissions to roundtable@muug.mb.ca
To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://www.muug.mb.ca/mailman/listinfo/roundtable or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to roundtable-request@muug.mb.ca
You can reach the person managing the list at roundtable-owner@muug.mb.ca
When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Roundtable digest..." Today's Topics:
- permanent email address (Dan Martin)
- Re: permanent email address (John Lange)
- Re: permanent email address (Hartmut W Sager)
Roundtable mailing list Roundtable@muug.mb.ca http://www.muug.mb.ca/mailman/listinfo/roundtable
Roundtable mailing list Roundtable@muug.mb.ca http://www.muug.mb.ca/mailman/listinfo/roundtable