Sounds like a full time job and a pretty damn unreasonable burden for someone who just wants to be able to send and receive email without some unaccountable asshole in California throwing darts to decide which ISP gets screwed today.

On 9/5/2013 1:02 AM, steve harley wrote:
on 2013-09-04 20:30 Mark Roberts wrote
Email will be through whoever is *hosting* the domains. Registration
has nothing to do with it (unless you're getting hosting from the
registrar).

for a domain, different services can be hosted with different companies;
for example i have web hosting for several domains with DreamHost, but
of the three that get serious email two have email service with
FastMail.fm, the other's email is hosted as a grandfathered Google Apps
account

so getting a good email service can be independent of your existing web
hosting; you don't even need to have web hosting, just ability to set an
MX record on your domain name

my $40/year fastmail account has been a great investment; multiple
domains, as many "aliases" as i want, more space than i can use, and
server-side filtering with Sieve scripts, a good webmail interface when
i need it; you can pay less for simple email hosting of a single domain

(i have no experience with hover.com, but i'm sure it's pretty good if
Godfrey uses it)



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