Benefits of owning a domain (was Re: Cross Yahoo off the list of free e-mail services!)
Paul Lussier
plussier at mindspring.com
Thu Mar 21 15:39:56 EST 2002
In a message dated: 21 Mar 2002 13:19:17 EST
"Kenneth E. Lussier" said:
>Domains are cheap these days, so anyone can afford it. Setting up the
>servers really only requires a few old PC's, a Linux distro, and some
>documentation.
You forgot one important thing:
Affordable, high speed, always-on internet access.
I could easily afford to register my own domain, but without xDSL or
cable modem access to the net, what good is it? A dial-up connection
just isn't a feasible means of running a domain. Can it be done?
Absolutely. Is it worth the trouble? No, not really. Especially if
the only reason is to gain POP3 e-mail access.
My $21/month for an ISP gets me upto 8 POP3 mailboxes if I really
need them. If I *really* want to run a website, I get 10MB or so of
space.
Running my own domain, as I'm sure is true for most internet users,
is actually *more* trouble than it's worth, especially considering
I'm restricted to dial-up access, as is the majority of the U.S.!
The fact that Yahoo is restricting free e-mail access to it's web
interface just means that I'll occasionally (once every couple of
months) check that mail box. I'll access that address just often
enough to keep it active, while leaving the mail on their systems
indefinitely costing them even more money!
POP3 access actually *saves* them money, because people like me who
use them basically provide free advertising services through the use
of their name in our e-mail addresses, *and* cost them little in
terms of IT costs (use of storage, backups, tapes, etc.).
Sure, we cost them in terms of bandwidth usage, but I'm willing to
bet the average POP3 user places far fewer demands upon their
infrastructure than a web interface user does!
Oh, well, I'll just continue using my mindspring account (now
Earthlink), which has provided me Linux-friendly, POP3 access without
complaint or problem for over 5 years now!
--
Seeya,
Paul
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