Hurrah! I found HERE <https://support.google.com/a/answer/1230670?hl=en>how to delete my googleapps trial account. It turns out it was hidden under 'Billing' and a tiny grey icon on the far right -- Greg K
On 26 November 2013 11:15, Stephen Price <[email protected]> wrote: > I use dnsimple (https://dnsimple.com/r/815f183c3ee842 yes that's my > referral link, as you get freebies for referrals). I think it costs me like > $3 per month. It's brilliant and they have a bunch of templated options. Ie > they have one for Google Apps that sets up 21 (just checked) records > automagically. You can even register domains through them ($14 per year is > pretty cheap!) > > Like them so much I've been transferring my domains over to them (and you > can use their NS for the ones you own but are registered elsewhere). > > No, Google Apps isn't free anymore but at $50 per year its affordable even > for personal use. I use it for business as well. I think how much I save on > a mail server (which would eventually become obsolete from a hardware > perspective). > > As for the redirect of email, you need to get your Google Apps account to > go and pick up the email (ie as a Pop client would). I think its better > than a forward, but that's just me. > In your inbox go to the Settings and click the Accounts tab. You can set > up Pop accounts there. There's also a Forward tab if you want to do it the > other way around I guess... push the mail from your Gmail account. The > Accounts tab should let you set up the send as feature (I think, its been a > while...) > > > > On Tue, Nov 26, 2013 at 7:23 AM, Greg Keogh <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Google Apps doesn't seem to have a free version any more, unless I've >> missed it. However I've opened a 30 day trial of Google Apps to see if it >> has the feature to redirect a domain's email to Gmail >> >> Now the admin page for my DNS records is nonsensical and I can't find an >> "advanced" way of adding MX records for Gmail. Now I have both >> [email protected] and [email protected] and it all has to go to the >> first one, so it just gets messier and messier. On top of that we have >> domains, DNS records and web sites in 5 different companies and I'm trying >> to figure out how to get them all onto one. One transfer has already >> stalled because I used the wrong password, and the whole process is turning >> into a major time-consuming project. Sheesh! -- Greg K >> >> >
