SEO has essentially destroyed search engines, what are some very useful websites that you might not get given by Google?

  • hperrin@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    https://port87.com

    An email service that uses addresses like yourname-appname@port87.com to organize all your email into a folder for every app/service.

    You can also make these addresses screen senders before their email goes through, for something like yourname-friends@port87.com.

    You can mark them as public and they’ll be included in a list if someone emails the bare address (yourname@port87.com), so you can share your bare address all over the internet without getting spam.

    (Full disclosure: I created and operate this service.)

    • Tuggles@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      So, you can do this with gmail already. What’s your pitch on why someone should use Port87 instead of Gmail (besides the obvious Google is evil, etc.)?

      • atoro@lemmy.ml
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        11 months ago

        A lot of services have stopped accepting + addresses as valid, or even stripping them before saving. So at least for a while, - addresses could be more useful

        • abraxas@sh.itjust.works
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          11 months ago

          Last I saw, Google charges for this. More than this guy’s service.

          Also, it seems like his service is about automatically having username-category email addresses. Definitely not hard to replicate, but it circumvents the common blocking of plus-signs in email addresses you see nowadays. And while not hard, it’s a bit less trivial to catch any old email with a dash in it and “magically” convert it to a category in the main inbox.

          • rappo@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            Google doesn’t even factor into this. Go to your registrar of choice (namecheap, etc), buy a domain, and setup that domain to forward all emails to your email address.

            So if you have abraxas@gmail.com and you just bought abraxas.me, in namecheap you can setup *@abraxas.me to go to your gmail account, and then sign up for sites using whatever@abraxas.me you want. There’s no + or - involved, use any word you want. Signing up for lemmy.world? lemmyworld@abraxas.me will go right to your gmail (or whatever email you use)

              • rappo@lemmy.world
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                11 months ago

                indeed. It comes in as reallyshadywebsite@squidspinachfootball.xyz, so not only can you easily filter/label them, but you can immediately tell who had a security breach and/or sold your email.

            • abraxas@sh.itjust.works
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              11 months ago

              Fair point. That is free. I guess it would boil down to what the mail categorization would look like in this guy’s service. I will say I thought it was odd that it isn’t just mail middleware with the guy struggling with having to build his IMAP in node.js.

      • hperrin@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        I don’t have it on the promotional site right now, but here’s the breakdown:

        • Receive unlimited mail, 500MB storage: Free
        • Send unlimited mail*: $1/month
        • 2GB extra: $2/month
        • 10GB extra: $6/month
        • 20GB extra: $10/month
        • 100GB extra: $20/month
        • 1TB extra: $40/month

        There are upcoming features that I haven’t done the market research and cost analysis for yet to determine pricing, but these are the features that are still in development:

        • Native mobile app (right now it’s a PWA): Free
        • IMAP/SMTP/CardDAV for third party clients and to import/export/sync: Undetermined price
        • Custom domain with unlimited addresses: Undetermined price
        • Additional users for you custom domain: Undetermined price

        * The reason for charging $1/month to send email is so that spammers won’t use my service to send spam. A spammer is very unlikely to divulge their real payment information.

        • xigoi@lemmy.sdf.org
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          11 months ago

          That sounds reasonable! Though personally, I definitely wouldn’t use an e-mail service without IMAP support.

          • hperrin@lemmy.world
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            11 months ago

            I feel you. Technically, the service is in a public beta test, only because I don’t have all the features complete yet.

            I have the IMAP spec printed out in a binder at my desk. I have to write the server myself because of how Port87 works (I can’t just use an off-the-shelf server, like Dovecot). But I’m working hard to get IMAP support out soon! :)

            PS: also, once I do write it, the IMAP server will be open source, just like the CardDAV server I’m working on.