Yahoo To Offer Unlimited E-mail Storage


Recommended Posts

Here's what someone at AOL had to say.

My main email account is Yahoo but i will say that AOL's free web account is really nice and clean.

I miss free Yahoo's POP3, damn everyone outside the US who has it, damn you all :p

Yahoo missed the boat, now they decide that unlimited storage is the thing to do? Well I am sorry Yahoo, that was like 2 years ago! Just crawl under a rock and depreciate...Nice move trying to buy Facebook though, I gotta hand it to them, they have guts, too bad they lack intelligence and market skills!

Yahoo missed the boat, now they decide that unlimited storage is the thing to do? Well I am sorry Yahoo, that was like 2 years ago! Just crawl under a rock and depreciate...Nice move trying to buy Facebook though, I gotta hand it to them, they have guts, too bad they lack intelligence and market skills!

Im pretty sure yahoo is the biggest email supplier. I dont see why you, or anyone else would get mad if they have unlimitted storage. How does that hurt you? You are acting as if doing this somehow make the service crappy. Yahoo isnt crawling underneath any rock, they are the rock.

  • 1 month later...
incidently the first such services are active and running successfully in india. And is called http://www.rediffmail.com and it seems to me that http://mail.yahoo.com is just copying the path of a successful enterprise.

I have written one such silly topic in my last post. If you have extra bandwidth to waste please visit...

http://ayub.blogspot.com/2007/03/storage-problems.html

-Ayub

Dear Sir

When Yahoo started giving 100MB storage space, there were some who could not get 100MB storage. There was trick for changing from 6MB to 100MB:

QUOTE:

======================================================

1. Login to your Yahoo! Mail account

2. If you see only 6MB, go to Mail Options

3. Select Account Information from the left of the screen

4. You'll be asked for your password again. Enter it.

5. You will see the Membership Information page

6. Copy the url of this page into notepad

7. Compare your url with this url:

http://edit.yahoo.com/config/set_intl?.chi...umb=***********

8. Copy your scrumb code (this should be the last 11 characters of your url) from your url and place it in the two places of my url where the *********** is. Copy this url (which has your scrumb code) back into your browser.

9. Change your settings to English - US

10. Accept the New User Agreement

11. You will be logged out

12. Go to mail.yahoo.com and relogin

======================================================

Is there any trick similar to the above for getting unlimited storage?

Could you please leet me know

Thanks

Murali Kavitarkika

[email protected]

To me, I think that this Unlimited email storage is stupid.

I rather have bigger file attachments.

It is stupid, I agree. It is all just a marketing ploy, a gimmick.

Would you rather join GMail at 2.8GB? Microsoft at 2GB? Or would you rather join Yahoo! who is offering unlimited storage?

I better join Yahoo! because what will happen when I need to store 3GB?

The answer is: you will never store 3GB of mail.

I just cleaned up 5 years of mail that I had been storing in MS Outlook Express. It was no larger than 500MB.

5 years...500MB. Mathematics would say that I wouldn't use 2GB until around 2022, and 2.8GB until around 2030. And if you look at Inbox.com which gives you 5GB, I wouldnt fill that until 2052. That is assuming the given rate, which is way higher than I ever would spend as the majority of that 500MB was sending and receiving school documents as attachments. Now that Im out of school, how often am I going to be sending attachments considering that my place of business handles everything through their website, including uploads? Not very often...

It is all a gimmick to get people who actually care about those numbers to sign up.

They only info I look at is:

Yahoo! - no free POP3, 10MB attachment size (free)

GMail - free POP3, 20MB attachment size

Inbox.com - free POP3, 20MB attachment size

AOL/AIM - free POP3, 16MB attachment size

Hotmail - no POP3, 10MB attachment size

Lycos - no free POP3, unlimited attachment size

Edited by Tokar
The answer is: you will never store 3GB of mail.

So because you will never need to store 3gb other people won't? Some of us archive the mail for business purposes, and a lot of my mail has attachments. If YOU don't need 3gb of storage it doesn't mean other people don't.

good news.

As for file attachment increases I'd like that as much as the next person but the reason they can offer these file restrictions in the GB region is the exact reason why attachment sizes are so low. Really they dont want you or expect users to use 5% of this storage and can ensure that by limiting the attachment size. As soon as they bump that up too much their ability to give you this much storage quickly becomes an expensive proposition due to the fact users will now very easily be able to actually make use of the space.

Some day attachment sizes will go up but It'll require HD space/price ratios to drop quite a bit further IMHO.

...

"We are giving them no reason to ever have to delete old e-mails," Yahoo co-founder David Filo said in a phone interview. "You can keep stuff forever."

...

"People should think about e-mail as something where they are archiving their lives," said Filo, who remains active in managing technical operations at the Sunnyvale, California, company and carries the honorific title of Chief Yahoo.

...

Repeating what google said a few years ago... :rolleyes:

It is stupid, I agree. It is all just a marketing ploy, a gimmick.

Would you rather join GMail at 2.8GB? Microsoft at 2GB? Or would you rather join Yahoo! who is offering unlimited storage?

I better join Yahoo! because what will happen when I need to store 3GB?

The answer is: you will never store 3GB of mail.

I just cleaned up 5 years of mail that I had been storing in MS Outlook Express. It was no larger than 500MB.

5 years...500MB. Mathematics would say that I wouldn't use 2GB until around 2022, and 2.8GB until around 2030. And if you look at Inbox.com which gives you 5GB, I wouldnt fill that until 2052. That is assuming the given rate, which is way higher than I ever would spend as the majority of that 500MB was sending and receiving school documents as attachments. Now that Im out of school, how often am I going to be sending attachments considering that my place of business handles everything through their website, including uploads? Not very often...

It is all a gimmick to get people who actually care about those numbers to sign up.

They only info I look at is:

Yahoo! - no free POP3, 10MB attachment size (free)

GMail - free POP3, 20MB attachment size

Inbox.com - free POP3, 20MB attachment size

AOL/AIM - free POP3, 16MB attachment size

Hotmail - no POP3, 10MB attachment size

Lycos - no free POP3, unlimited attachment size

I agree! Most people won't even have more than 30MB of e-mails anyways sans attachments. I think what will set these e-mail providers apart is not how much space they give you, but how big the attachment sizes would be and whether they would include free pop3/SMTP usage.

Actually my Yahoo! and Hotmail has free POP3. I think it may be continuation of my free services as I was an early user.

But I agree, nowadays the selling point of email services is NOT storage capacity, but rather, interface and speed. By that I have to vote Yahoo (beta) and Gmail as better performers.

So because you will never need to store 3gb other people won't? Some of us archive the mail for business purposes, and a lot of my mail has attachments. If YOU don't need 3gb of storage it doesn't mean other people don't.

i agree not everything is about you

I know a guy who used yahoo for e-mail purposes and damn he had lot **** there

It is stupid, I agree. It is all just a marketing ploy, a gimmick.

Would you rather join GMail at 2.8GB? Microsoft at 2GB? Or would you rather join Yahoo! who is offering unlimited storage?

I better join Yahoo! because what will happen when I need to store 3GB?

The answer is: you will never store 3GB of mail.

*snip*

I totally agree and have ever since gmail arrived. However thats all assuming email does remain as text only format with the occasional html based email. I wouldnt be suprised if in the future audio/video based messages will be common place which will see us using drastically increased volumes of space. Of course they'd also need to allow us to send emails of greater size too but to accomodate.

I use 1% of my 2.8 GB. Sure, it can't hurt to have Yahoo increase the size like that, but man, there are so many other more useful things they could do with their service... Before some smartass goes "yeah, like what!?" ;), well, increased attachment size for one thing. Attachments are generally across mail providers still unevolved since years back, while the same can absolutely not be said about storage costs.

I have literally every email I've ever gotten stored on Gmail, and on that account I'm at 89% of the 2.8 gigs.

So yeah, 3 GB isn't what I would consider "unlimited" but it should be enough for most people. I mean, I'm talking emails from 1994 here, so close to 13 years of email :D Though alot of it the past couple of years naturally sometimes has a bigger file attachment, I'm not to worried about a 10 meg size or 20 or even 30. I just zip em and forget em.

Yahoo offering unlimited is great as well, I've uploaded all my email there as well (always good to have more than one back up no?) so yeahhhhh. Plus, I just like Yahoo's interface more now. I know everyone is like, well Google's is the "less is more" mentality, but really Yahoo's is just fine for me. Runs fast, looks great, and is very functional while offering some pretty nice features.

I have literally every email I've ever gotten stored on Gmail, and on that account I'm at 89% of the 2.8 gigs.

So yeah, 3 GB isn't what I would consider "unlimited" but it should be enough for most people. I mean, I'm talking emails from 1994 here, so close to 13 years of email :D Though alot of it the past couple of years naturally sometimes has a bigger file attachment, I'm not to worried about a 10 meg size or 20 or even 30. I just zip em and forget em.

Yahoo offering unlimited is great as well, I've uploaded all my email there as well (always good to have more than one back up no?) so yeahhhhh. Plus, I just like Yahoo's interface more now. I know everyone is like, well Google's is the "less is more" mentality, but really Yahoo's is just fine for me. Runs fast, looks great, and is very functional while offering some pretty nice features.

How did you get emails from 1994 up onto Gmail? Just wondering.

Thanks. :)

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Microsoft is making Windows 11's context menus faster, simpler, and configurable by Taras Buria Five years ago, Windows 11 introduced redesigned context menus, offering users a simpler, more modern design. However, customers quickly discovered that the new menus leave a lot to be desired. Many are unhappy with performance (they are really slow), while others dislike the double-layed design, where many options are hidden behind the "Show more options" button. In addition, over the years, menus became cluttered and overloaded. While Microsoft has already fixed plenty of pain points across Windows 11, context menus remain mostly unchanged. Fortunately, Microsoft is finally listening. Marcus Ash, Design and Research Lead for Windows at Microsoft, responded to a tweet on X, confirming that the company is working on fixing Windows 11's context menus. Reworked context menus are supposed to be faster, simpler by default, and "configurable to what you use most." What the latter means is unknown, just like whether Microsoft plans to keep the classic menu alongside the modern one, but according to Marcus, the wait should finally be over soon, as he promised to "share our approach soon." Improved context menus will most likely appear first in Windows 11 preview builds in the Experimental Channel. While we wait for Microsoft to release them, you can try fixing context menus on your PC with a simple tool called Windows 11 Context Menu Manager. It lets you disable entries you do not need, not only cleaning up context menus, but also making them significantly faster. Microsoft has already improved Windows 11's Start menu and taskbar, so hopefully it will address user criticism of the context menu as well. Stay tuned for new Windows 11 preview builds, which usually arrive every Friday.
    • If the drive/memory is soldered to the board, which it probably is, then it's a no from me
    • Driver Genius 25.0.0.143 by Razvan Serea Driver Genius is a professional driver management tool features both driver management and hardware diagnostics. Driver Genius provides such practical functions as driver backup, restoration, update and removal for computer users. If you often reinstall your operating system, you may not forget such painful experiences of searching all around for all kinds of drivers. If unfortunately you have lost your driver CD, the search will be more troublesome and time-consuming. Driver Genius can automatically find drivers for a device when the system can't find a driver for it. It can recognize the name and vendor's information of the device, and directly provide download URL for the required driver. Driver Genius also supports online updates for drivers of existing hardware devices. Driver Genius customers can obtain information for latest drivers by Driver Genius's LiveUpdate program, which can synchronize to the database on Driver Genius site. Features at a glance: Find the latest drivers for your computer. One click to update all drivers silently. Automatically install driver updates silently. Make your drivers are always up to date. New rollback driver design for safer driver update. Free to backup all drivers now! Package all drivers to an executable auto installer. One click to restore all drivers. Remove invalid or useless drivers/devices, improve system performance and stability. New system information tool. Detailed hardware inventory. Hardware temperature monitor. Protect your CPU, GPU and HDD. New system transfer assistant. Upgrade/degrade your windows system easily. New SSD Speeder. Improve your disk performance and reliability. New System booster provides over 90 optimization options that make your computer run faster and smoother. New System Cleanup can help you to clean up the temporary files and cache files or other junk files in system. Driver Genius 25.0.0.143 changelog: Enhanced detection for Windows Runtime components. Update the hardware detection component to support more new hardware. Update the compression component to address security issues. Download: Driver Genius 25.0.0.143 | 20.7 MB (Shareware) View: Driver Genius Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • We do it all the time on our IT Service desk mailbox to add a reference, in the subject line, once it's been logged and then it's filed into the appropriate sub-folder. Other companies probably do the same thing.
    • "No. The "New Outlook for Windows" does not support non-cloud mailboxes (such as on-premises Exchange servers). Furthermore, because the New Outlook effectively functions as a web-based client, it requires all connected accounts—even standard IMAP or POP accounts—to route and cache data through Microsoft's cloud servers. You can verify the accepted account setups using the Microsoft Supported Account Types Guide." Built to fail "New" Outlook is basically just webmail in a window wrapper and it's usefulness reflects that.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      Carru_123 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Dr Jared Dental Studio earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      RG INVESTMENT GROUP earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Very Popular
      The Norwegian Drone Pilot earned a badge
      Very Popular
    • Very Popular
      s0nic69 earned a badge
      Very Popular
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      472
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      250
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      79
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      67
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      60
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!