8 comments

[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 43.8 ms ] thread
I would update the headline with the full "For your convenience" lead-in. I think it's important to the tone.
Interesting. I guess Google is pushing domain owners to buy a Google Apps account instead of just using mail forwarding. I've been forwarding my personal domain to my Gmail account for almost 10 years now and only pay for the cost of the domain renewal. I wonder if you will be able to bypass this by creating a filter to move all e-mails put in the "External" folder back into your inbox.
Why you are forwarding? Why you don't retrieve your emails with IMAP/POP3/SMTP into Gmail? http://www.texelate.co.uk/img/blog/gmail.gif
I personally hate that, if only because I want my email to be received as soon as possible, which does not happen that way.

Coworker beside me: "I just sent you that thing."

Me: "Great, let me just go to settings, accounts, scroll to my work account, and click 'check now' so I don't have to wait half an hour"

Is this supposed to be a net neutrality protest thing?
Yeah right. I'm sure it's photoshopped. Look at the compression artefacts. It looks like stuff was cut out from a screenshot and put together. However, this scenario might happen in the future. Mail providers not taking mail from other providers.

Oh well, You might say it already happened: Whatsapp, Facebook Messenger, etc.

Normally, I would immediately judge this kind of thing as fake. That is, until they decided to silently ignore[1] federated XMPP servers, turning gtalk (err, "hangouts"?) into more of a walled garden. Now, I'm not sure, because if decided to un-federate port 5269/tcp, the idea of doing it to 25/tcp is suddenly plausible.

[1] yes, "ignore" - they didn't even bother sending a NAK, so subscription requests end up looking still-pending or lost from the outside