Mailing List Archive
tlug.jp Mailing List tlug archive tlug Mailing List Archive
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- Date: Mon, 18 Sep 2006 16:41:14 +0900
- From: Micheal Cooper <mcooper@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- References: <4508C238.5050006@example.com> <d8fcc0800609140112u110d5617o8a81f0824505d3ec@example.com> <450BA119.7010007@example.com> <17676.6429.608793.118096@example.com> <450CE9C0.5010605@example.com> <17678.16805.893124.166445@example.com>
- User-agent: Thunderbird 1.5.0.7 (Windows/20060909)
stephen@example.com wrote:The students are another matter. I would say that in my experience, the majority of their non-university addresses are cellphones. They're basically inadequate for communicating anything except commands and tete-a-tete appointments. Even if you want to schedule 3This is so true. Cellphone email is king in Japan for contacting young people, but it really doesn't work well. Also, the cell phone companies allow email addresses that are not allowed in normal email, screwing up communications.OSU employee. In U.S. academia anyway I would be willing to bet that most universities would be willing to forward mail indefinitely for former faculty (at least).I was doing that, but I had to stop forwarding because of spam. The spam would come to us and be forwarded to Yahoo or Gmail or X University, etc., and then it would bounce back with sometimes angry messages about us sending spam. In the end, we were inundated with bounced mail because of the spam the departed teachers were being sent.This is not possible in academia. Companies and government often have that option, but academics, rarely.I respect your experience, but I asked around at my school, and just about all the faculty say that they do all of their research-related email correspondence with a non-university account, and many of them simply forward school mail to Gmail or Yahoo, etc.In fact, for corporate internal communications, you probably want something that looks more like an issue tracker than email.No, I really think that is true, in some ways. I had the idea of institutional bulletin boards for conversation, which is sort of the same destination. A series of forums on the issues discussed in the email would be great, but each thread would have to have a membership list and not allow non-members to read it. The advantage would be archived and accessible histories of the discussions and work flow, but managing accessibility would be a nightmare.Steve "it's dangerous to invite me to speak theoretically" TurnbulActually, I enjoyed and appreciated it very much. Thank you.I am not advocating any solution, but I am looking for other perspectives to help me think about the problem more creatively.Micheal
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- From: Josh Glover
- Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- From: Stuart Woodward
- Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- From: Stephen J. Turnbull
- References:
- [tlug] outsourcing email service
- From: Micheal E. Cooper
- Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- From: Josh Glover
- Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- From: Micheal Cooper
- Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- From: stephen
- Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- From: Micheal Cooper
- Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- From: stephen
Home | Main Index | Thread Index
- Prev by Date: Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- Next by Date: Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- Previous by thread: Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- Next by thread: Re: [tlug] outsourcing email service
- Index(es):
Home Page Mailing List Linux and Japan TLUG Members Links