Our Pets Can Remind Us to Be Charitable
16 hours ago
is the blog of an Orthodox Christian and is published under the spiritual patronage of St. John of San Francisco. Topics likely to be discussed include matters relating to Orthodoxy as well as other religious confessions, politics, economics, social issues, current events or anything else which interests me. © 2006-2024
4 comments:
I've had aol since we first got Internet in 1995. Also had gmail and yahoo/y mail for various extra things (and a verizon account when we used them for Internet). I still like aol the best.
I've had aol since we first got Internet in 1995. Also had gmail and yahoo/y mail for various extra things (and a verizon account when we used them for Internet). I still like aol the best.
I use both Yahoo Mail and GMail (from Google). We have a "family" e-mail account on Yahoo and I have a personal e-mail account on GMail.
Of the two, I prefer GMail; but it has to be said that Google, like Yahoo, will update their e-mail software with what they think of as "improvements" but not all users agree that the changes are for the better.
When considering what to do about e-mail, it's important to distinguish between the e-mail service and the e-mail software that you use to access your e-mail. These two distinct items are often packaged together; Yahoo Mail provides both an e-mail service and the browser-based software you use to read and send e-mail. The "new version" that has you so riled up is a new version of the client software; the back-end e-mail service probably hasn't changed at all.
The reason I bring this up is that you don't have to use Yahoo's client software to access your Yahoo mail. You can use just about any stand-alone e-mail client you like. The Thunderbird e-mail client (from the folks who made the Firefox browser) is an excellent one; and some folks like Microsoft Outlook. Either one of these can be configured to use Yahoo's mail server as a back end. And there are lots of others.
Rather than switch to a different mail service and use that service's web-based mail client (and thus be at their mercy whenever they choose to "improve" their client), you can shop around for e-mail client software that you like, and wire it up to your existing Yahoo account.
There is a good post on Lifehacker (here) that lays all of this out.
I like Gmail. After Orthodoxy, Liberty, personal growth, and Bitcoin, I probably talk about why I like Google the most. So I'm biased in already liking Google, but I've never had trouble with Gmail (almost ten years using it).
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