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Found this (quite by accident):
http://www.w3schools.com/browsers/browsers_stats.asp[^]
It shows browser type hits on the W3C website. The following (if it formats correctly) is for the most recent month for which they have data posted:
<br />
"2007..IE7...IE6...IE5..Fx....Moz..S....O "<br />
"July 20.1% 36.9% 1.5% 34.5% 1.4% 1.5% 1.9%"<br />
Certainly as respectable as Safari and Opera!
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein
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before gmail i had 6/7 different mail accounts: some web based others by outlook
but since i've used gmail i can organize and find all my mail in only one account!
THANKS GOOGLE, THANKS GMAIL!!!
i couldn't live without anymore
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I like having email on my own domains.
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me too!
you can do it by gmail!
http://mail.google.com/support/bin/topic.py?topic=1570
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Yes I suppose you could always set up a forward.
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Google Applicance. Truly it is an excellent feature.
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giammin wrote: gmail i can organize and find all my mail in only one account!
And for me the client does every thing outlook did for me (at work) faster and I have full access to all of my messages anywhere I can get access to the internet. I guess eventually I will cancel my paid yahoo account as well as I never use it anymore as gmail is much faster, it has a much better search engine and the threaded mail feature is very useful.
John
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for me, gmail is quite good engine for
e-mailing because of its elegance UI
and faster than others (I think)
and his Dynamic interface give it a lot of points.
Lord Cover
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GMail is the best, fast, free, with few advertisments
integrated chat, simple search, it supports multiaccount
(you can reply to mails with no-gmail addresses)
I don't like GMail contact manager, and I hope it will
be expanded or redesigned, by now I use EssentialPIM Portable.
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and i LOVE the label and filter system!
i can organize all my mail easily
when they arrive are already labeled and organized.
or we can talk about attachment handling...
with view and download features (imege preview, download all, view all)
or we can talk about spam or phishing mails which don't waste my time no more!
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And the SpamFilter is really very good. You do not need to bother wasting your time fighting through the sea of spam.
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Doesn't gmail keep your mail, deleted and otherwise, for their own uses?
Doesn't that bother any of you?
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein
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i don't think that someone is reading my email....
and i don't mind if a robot search keywords on my email for displaying some ads that i don't care about.
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And why in the world would you imagine/believe/etc. that it simply stops at that?
Privacy - something people take so for granted until it's gone and they're unhappy with the conseequences.
You can bet anything, at any odds, that you (and sadly, your correspondents) are being personally profiled.
In your case, I don't care what you do with your own privacy. That's your choice.
But, any others who write to you are also being profiled . . . and victimized.
Myself? I didn't volunteer to have gmail profile me, so on the occasion I send mail to them it's from my own SMTP client (where I invent new From:'s continiously). I am falling victim to your lack of intrest in your own privacy.
For some of us (or maybe only me?), I don't care to wait for disaster before trying to avoid it.
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein
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Balboos wrote: And why in the world would you imagine/believe/etc. that it simply stops at that?
Well, most of us don't really have anything worth hiding (unless your mom's meatloaf really tasting bad is a secret). Of course, Google could get some demographics off this (and probably do). Considering there's no ads in my face all day though, I can't say I mind that much.
I use GMail for work and personal communications. Would it piss me off Google was caught spying? Yeah. Would it be the end of the world? No, because I wouldn't use GMail or any web-based client for that matter for sensitive communications period. Or at the very least, I would encrypt a text file attachment when using it.
Also, keep in mind, even with a diff client, when email is stored on the server, ANY provider could have the potential to scan emails. At least Google, stated some intents. We just get scared because apparently Google is good at it.
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: ANY provider could have the potential to scan emails
We're not talking about potential - we're talking about stated intent!
Jeremy Falcon wrote: Well, most of us don't really have anything worth hiding
I was really hoping you'd not post that particular line. So - if you don't have anything worth hiding, then you won't mind if someone opens your (snail) mail and reads it? And your phone calls? Watch your vote? In fact, that particular "What Me Worry?" line is, in my opinion, dispicable in nature.
It matters not if what you're doing privately is right or wrong. Privacy isn't a judgement, it's a human right.
Perhaps you ought to consider: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_they_came...[^] - although couched in the contexts of politics, it may be applied, analogously, to personal privacy. Indeed - how can the two be thought of seperately?
Shrugging one's shoulders? It's happened before. As a rule, it ends up bad.
"If not me, who? If not now, when?"
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Balboos wrote: We're not talking about potential - we're talking about stated intent!
Actually, their stated intent was was for ads only and that no human would read it. They never said they were going to snoop around and have a jolly good time reading people's emails over a beer.
Balboos wrote: I was really hoping you'd not post that particular line. So - if you don't have anything worth hiding, then you won't mind if someone opens your (snail) mail and reads it? And your phone calls? Watch your vote? In fact, that particular "What Me Worry?" line is, in my opinion, dispicable in nature.
Well, I didn't expect you to rationalize. For one, snail mail tends to have more personal traces (ie, bank statements). Two, there's a difference between you knowing beforehand of someone listening in. The key difference is here choice. Nobody is forcing this on me, and I don't use gmail for anything worth hiding (as I already stated). Tell me, do you automatically hang up when you call a customer service dept. and hear "this call may be recorded for training purposes"? If you don't, then you're a hypocrite.
Balboos wrote: Perhaps you ought to consider: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_they_came...[^] - although couched in the contexts of politics, it may be applied, analogously, to personal privacy. Indeed - how can the two be thought of seperately?
And like, ya know, it's been scientifically proven that being a poet makes someone always right.
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: no human would read it.
Obviously no human would read any particular mail. The data, however, will be accumulated to build up a miticulous profile of the senders.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: The key difference is here choice. Nobody is forcing this on me,
Here, you're wrong: it is not a matter of choice for anyone who sends mail to your gmail account. They, too, are grabbed up in the grist-mill. If it were only 'you', I'd put it in the category of cigarette smokers: you're welcome to die, so long as I don't have to breath the smoke or pay the bills.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: do you automatically hang up when you call a customer service dept. and hear "this call may be recorded for training purposes"?
This is a bogus analogy: If I call customer service, I have business with them and the information whether recorded or transcribed falls into two categories: (a) identification to prove who I am (which is info they already have), and (b) information I want them to have - for I did, after all, call them! To add a (c): if I didn't initiate the call, then they don't get anything from me. Giving information to an unknown stranger would be just plain stupid.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: And like, ya know, it's been scientifically proven that being a poet makes someone always right
Here no evil. See no evil. Speak no evil. - Always a good answer to philosphy that might cause one to give pause in their judgements. The use of "always right" in your comment on poets? If I'm not mistaken, it's an obtuse reference to dismiss the concept without addressing it. Works for TV commercials. Political propaganda. Not that well here . . .
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Balboos wrote: Obviously no human would read any particular mail. The data, however, will be accumulated to build up a miticulous profile of the senders.
No duh. I already mentioned demographics. Which I'm sure are used for ads. Google isn't the only company that uses/sells/buy demographics. In fact, I've bet you've purchased products from companies that have used or collected them - especially if you register for their product. It's not a big deal if a computer finds out I like to eat pizza. Really, the world will move on. Pizza hut finds this out every time you order as well. You don't think they just delete their customer data do you?
Balboos wrote: Here, you're wrong: it is not a matter of choice for anyone who sends mail to your gmail account. They, too, are grabbed up in the grist-mill.
Really, because I don't notice anyone putting a gun to your head making you email my gmail account. There's still a choice.
Balboos wrote: Here, you're wrong:
Nope, you just like to argue rather than read.
Balboos wrote: If I call customer service, I have business with them and the information whether recorded or transcribed falls into two categories: (a) identification to prove who I am (which is info they already have), and (b) information I want them to have - for I did, after all, call them! To add a (c): if I didn't initiate the call, then they don't get anything from me. Giving information to an unknown stranger would be just plain stupid.
All hypocritical and you know it. Of course, this is completely different from me creating an account of my own free will and sending off emails of my own free will alright. In fact, Google has less personally identifiable information than that cust. service dept. too.
Balboos wrote: Always a good answer to philosphy that might cause one to give pause in their judgements. The use of "always right" in your comment on poets? If I'm not mistaken, it's an obtuse reference to dismiss the concept without addressing it. Works for TV commercials. Political propaganda. Not that well here . . .
Um, no. It's called false credibility. You used it, I was pointing it out. Sorry for going over your head.
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Balboos wrote: Works for TV commercials.
Btw, those TV stations track ratings. You may wanna stop watching those commercials. Ya know, if you're a firm believer in not being tracked.
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I was about to reply to your last post, but this one proved what your last strongly indicated: an inability to have your decisions questioned, and a poor understanding of the consequenses of cumulative actions.
Perhaps you should consider scratching 'database' off your list of skill sets.
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein
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Balboos wrote: I was about to reply to your last post, but this one proved what your last strongly indicated: an inability to have your decisions questioned, and a poor understanding of the consequenses of cumulative actions.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ad_hominem[^]
Have fun feeling all warm and fuzzy with yourself.
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Ad Hominem
It's natural that you'd be familiar with the term - just consider your own reference to the credibility of poets in one of your earlier posts to this thread.
Per my previous post - since the context was clearly one of personal behavior, choice, their impacts on others (who send mail to your gmail account), &etc., the fact that the reference would be to you, as an individual, is a natural consequence. Recursive usage of the phrase it would seem!
As per the database reference: if you understood the power available from catagorizing and linking all of the information they mine after storing it in database(s), you'd understand the magnitude of the problem - and it's multi-dimensional, as they create networks of aquaintaces, mutual interests, and so forth, from content, sender, recipient(s).
I think we can both agree on one thing - enough time has been wasted upon this branch of the thread.
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein
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