idnet.co.uk email address cost

Started by mrjeffery, Jan 06, 2008, 00:12:47

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mrjeffery

I paid for an idnet.co.uk email address when i signed up to idnet (£4). Is it a one off payment or monthly?

Adam

I believe it is a monthly cost. Out of interest, why did you select an idnet.co.uk address? (You don't have to answer that. :))
Adam

mrjeffery

Thanks. It was just personal preference really, i think a .co.uk email address is more fitting and less widespread. I thought it was just a one off payment though, £35/month for an isp is the most i can afford sensibly (only just mind!) so the extra £4/month on top of that means the address is  going to have to go unfortunately. C'est la vie!

Adam

The free idnet.com addresses work just as well imho, so I think you'll be happy with them. £35 is a fair amount for broadband, especially taking the service into account. :)
Adam

mrjeffery

Quote from: Adam on Jan 06, 2008, 00:45:55
The free idnet.com addresses work just as well imho, so I think you'll be happy with them. £35 is a fair amount for broadband, especially taking the service into account. :)

Absolutely. You definately get what you pay for :)

scook94

You could always register a .co.uk domain name of your liking  for a few quid a year and use email forwarding. If you hop ISPs every now and again it saves the hassle of having to let everyone know your new email address...
Steven
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Arthix

Quote from: scook94 on Jan 06, 2008, 01:18:05
You could always register a .co.uk domain name of your liking  for a few quid a year and use email forwarding. If you hop ISPs every now and again it saves the hassle of having to let everyone know your new email address...

Thats what I did, Arthix.co.uk :laugh:, Cost me £6.93 for the domain (for two years) but i'm paying £17.61 a year for an email package. Probably cancel it now that I'm with Idnet though.

Sebby

Quote from: scook94 on Jan 06, 2008, 01:18:05
You could always register a .co.uk domain name of your liking  for a few quid a year and use email forwarding. If you hop ISPs every now and again it saves the hassle of having to let everyone know your new email address...
Indeed; I think that's the way to go in this day and age, and it's significantly less than £4/month. I registered a domain with 1&1 and it costs about £10/year for the email package. It's worth every penny.  :)

Adam

I've been meaning to setup my own domain/email but I never get around to it. Though using independent services such as Gmail has a similar outcome to running your own domain/email.
Adam

mogden

#9
...apologies for boring rant, but there's too much Scotch in the house and I have a cold...

I think there are real reasons for separating out the components of the internet as much as possible, so it's easy to point the finger when something goes wrong. It's also nice to have your own .com (I paid $50 to Godaddy for mine for 10 years)

I used to point the .com at my ISP but (see previous rants on ISPs) my choices weren't the best, and last May 186K's email servers played up once too often. I bought webhosting from webhosting.uk.com which included email in/out plus all sorts of goodies I had wanted to tinker with. So I moved the domain over.

Two days later my access to my own domain was blocked by 186K :o I of course searched for an alternative explanation http://forum.186k.co.uk/viewtopic.php?t=189 but it seemed that someone at 186K had actually taken time out from sorting out the myriad of problems to block MY access to THOSE PARTICULAR IP addresses. I could still get to them if I used a proxy and other 186K 'users' could see the website - it was just me.

Strangely enough I left 186K. A task made easier by the fact that my email hosting was a separate entity.

One word of caution though - some ISPs (not IDNet) block access to port 25 (SMTP out) unless it's to their email server. Whilst understandable to a degree, this has two side effects: 1) your email looks more like spam as it's not coming from where it should and 2) it means you're reliant on your host ISP and need to set up an email account. To get around this some hosting companies offer alternative port numbers. It's worth the ask before committing.

Glass empty alert!
Matt

ceci n'est pas un .sig

colirv

Quote from: mogden on Jan 06, 2008, 19:49:37
One word of caution though - some ISPs (not IDNet) block access to port 25 (SMTP out) unless it's to their email server. Whilst understandable to a degree, this has two side effects: 1) your email looks more like spam as it's not coming from where it should and 2) it means you're reliant on your host ISP and need to set up an email account. To get around this some hosting companies offer alternative port numbers. It's worth the ask before committing.

My domain hosts, Purplecloud, simply block any outgoing email they consider spam. I've had so many false positives (I report spam received by forwarding it) I only use them for incoming and send via IDNet. That's worth asking about as well.
Colin


Ann

I found sending through purplecloud took forever.. email would just hang there for an age.  Couldn't be doing with that so I too send through IDNet and receive through purplecloud who I have to say, have been excellent.

Rik

1&1's smtp server can be a bit leaden too, Ann. :(
Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Sebby

Quote from: Rik on Jan 07, 2008, 12:59:10
1&1's smtp server can be a bit leaden too, Ann. :(
I can honestly say, Rik, that in over a year, I haven't had a single problem, be it with their incoming or outgoing server.  I've recommended a few people to them and they haven't had an issue either.

At the end of the day, you can always use your ISP's SMTP server anyway, and if they're good (like IDNet), you can be sure it will work well.  :)

Rik

1&1 had horrendous problems last February, Sebby, but they seem to have been OK since then though, compared to the IDNet smtp servers, I do find outgoing mail can take a little longer to send.
Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Sebby

Fair enough. Not had any problems myself.  :)

Rik

It made the pages of El Reg - I ended up with two months free service by way of compensation. Their CS wasn't a patch on IDNet's. :)
Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

Sebby

It's strange that I missed that and didn't have any trouble.  ???

Oh well, I'm not complaining.  ;D

Ann

I assumed that the hold up on sending mail is an authentication thing.  I used to have an email address with a private server with authentication and that used to hesitate before completely going.  Wonder if it'll still work.. hmm.

Rik

You're probably right, Ann, it does seem to be a 'stop and think about it' type of delay.
Rik
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This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.