How it Works6 mins ago
The Future Of Yahoo
16 Answers
Hi!
Do you have a Yahoo email address? It might be time to consider a back up as the company prepares itself for eventual sale.
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http:// www.dai lymail. co.uk/w ires/af p/artic le-3527 492/Yah oo-fait hful-se ek-calm -eye-st orm.htm l
Not that it will go away, but so you can jump ship if it ends up being bought by a company you try to avoid (like Facebook for example).
It's been a sad, yet completely predicable fall of a "giant" as they failed to keep up with literally any advancements, trends and shifts in the internet's ecosystem.
Anyway, it'll be a long time until they completely crash out or are bought by buzzfeed or someone. So while we wait for that, do you still use Yahoo, or any of their products for anything?
Do you have a Yahoo email address? It might be time to consider a back up as the company prepares itself for eventual sale.
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Not that it will go away, but so you can jump ship if it ends up being bought by a company you try to avoid (like Facebook for example).
It's been a sad, yet completely predicable fall of a "giant" as they failed to keep up with literally any advancements, trends and shifts in the internet's ecosystem.
Anyway, it'll be a long time until they completely crash out or are bought by buzzfeed or someone. So while we wait for that, do you still use Yahoo, or any of their products for anything?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I find it interesting that (for a service which has become an essential part of our daily lives) people are so reluctant to pay a (small) monthly fee for a decent guaranteed level of service - free from adverts and irritating 'features' .
For a couple of quid a month I get a nice, personalised, domain name and up to 20 email addresses based on it - so you could give the whole family their own addresses or (as I do) have variants of your email address for different purposes. I can use my provider's own webmail access, or use a client like outlook, or even add them to my gmail - it's very flexible and secure.
I happen to prefer the new .uk extension to .co.uk, so I have (and these are not my real addresses, so don't bother spamming me) :
[email protected]
shopping @sunnydave.uk
business@sunnydave. uk
[email protected] (for use on dodgy sites)
etc etc.
For a couple of quid a month, why be at the mercy of a 'free' provider - there is no such thing as a free lunch (or email service) - you always pay in some way ...
For a couple of quid a month I get a nice, personalised, domain name and up to 20 email addresses based on it - so you could give the whole family their own addresses or (as I do) have variants of your email address for different purposes. I can use my provider's own webmail access, or use a client like outlook, or even add them to my gmail - it's very flexible and secure.
I happen to prefer the new .uk extension to .co.uk, so I have (and these are not my real addresses, so don't bother spamming me) :
[email protected]
shopping @sunnydave.uk
business@sunnydave. uk
[email protected] (for use on dodgy sites)
etc etc.
For a couple of quid a month, why be at the mercy of a 'free' provider - there is no such thing as a free lunch (or email service) - you always pay in some way ...
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