On 08/29/14 08:54, Ross Finlayson wrote: >> I've also seen many people who keep a gmail or other mass market account >> as a professional address knowing that they will move between >> institutional addresses. As companies come and go faster and people >> transition between them more often, keeping a semi-permanent >> professional contact point is a sound strategy. > > Can these people really be confident that "gmail.com" will outlive their professional life? At the very least, they should use their own domain name - even if they use a GMail or Yahoo Mail-type service to host their email. (As an extra benefit - to keep this message on-topic - the email that they send won't be subject to DMARC.) They probably do not believe that gmail is forever, but they are one of the best bets at the moment. I'm not asserting that these people are solving the IMHO impossible problem of "can I have an e-mail address that lasts my lifetime?" but the problem of "how can I get a quasi-permanent Internet presence for a reasonable investment?" People have widely differing values of "reasonable investment." I think gmail meets that criteria for a large set of professionals (especially those who are not primarily networking professionals). Your mileage may vary, and evidently does. > > The fact that such services are useful is undeniable. As is the fact that "@yahoo.com" and "@gmail.com" email address look unprofessional. They just do. I think that the assertion that anything "looks unprofessional" is a subjective assertion. My understanding is that facts are objective, hence I don't consider such assertions facts. You do what you think is best, though. -- Ted Faber http://www.isi.edu/~faber PGP: http://www.isi.edu/~faber/pubkeys.asc Unexpected attachment on this mail? See http://www.isi.edu/~faber/FAQ.html#SIG
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