net

Life after Spam

When you signed up for that exciting new email list you never suspected they’d sell you out or that you’d be deleting “Amazing Free Deal” emails for months. You were young and naive, but now you know better.

So what do you do about all that unsolicited “spam” email? Call the boys in blue at SpamCop. This week we’ll take a look at one of the most useful free services on the net.

For most of us, spam is a rude reality of working and playing on the Internet. You unsubscribe, complain and filter, but not even the Bulk Mail folder or Mail’s bounce feature can save you. You were doomed to the daily ritual of cleaning out the inbox… until now.

In all my experience in combating spam (yeah, I signed up for the same email list) I have found only one effective weapon, my ace in the hole. When I went to SpamCop, it was more out of a desire to spite the spammers than hope of deliverance. But SpamCop has brought my daily spam count from the 50′s and the 60′s to the 3′s and 4′s.

SpamCop is a spam reporting system. To make it work you need to do three things. First you open an account. SpamCop will assign you an email address which you will use to report spam. Second, you forward your spam email to the assigned address. If you use Entourage, use the free Spam Reporter Script to speed up this step. SpamCop replies back to each forwarded message with a link to a report. Follow this link and scroll to the “send report” button and you’re done.

From there on out, SpamCop takes over. Routers are called in for questioning and shady IP packets are hauled off in cuffs. Really I have no idea what happens, but what I do know is that it works.

A bit of advice to you: SpamCop reporting may seem time consuming or tedious at first, but hang in there. It is more than worth the time put in. This brings me to my final point…

Now this may sound a little out of character for a cheapskate like me, but listen up. I spent months, even years drifting from one email address to the next, hiding out only to be found again. Thanks to SpamCop, my record is clean (or at least my InBox). Even though SpamCop’s reporting is free, it is definitly worth a donation. So when you breathe your big sigh of relief on finding “no new messages”, consider tipping your hat to the Spam Cops.

-Brian

Free RSS Services

This week we’ve got some useful, and of course free RSS services.

Bloglines

Upload your blogroll (as an OPML) or enter your favorite feeds manually to track your subscriptions from any internet connection. Bloglines even has a desktop client that alerts you when your feeds are updated. It might be the most pleasant way to stay on top of the news on a PC.

Feedster

Here’s another online service that can handle your blogroll. Feedster also has an RSS search engine that will let you sift through a top of new feeds.

FeedBurner

This free service, still in alpha, will let you jazz up your news feeds. It reads your existing feed, enhances it and hosts it. FeedBurner takes the traffic burden off your site and gives you additional statistics and features.

FeedValidator

The ‘net is full of outlaws, but when it comes to XML formats, you don’t want to find yourself on the wrong side of the standard. Proof your feed’s compliance and troubleshoot errors with the FeedValidator

With these tools you can once again command control of your email. Have fun.

Brian

Real-time

One of the promises of the Internet was instant communication. And while there are a few rays on real-time action on the internet, we spend way too much of our online lives waiting for pages to load or email to be returned.

Well, we’re not gonna take it, right? With the promise of AJAX and instant response its time to take the net to task with instant applications.

FeedXs

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Feedxs is a feed building service. You open an account and can add things to your own custom feed. Not a new idea, I know. But you can post items to your feed directly (and instantly) from MSN. Once you get it set up you can add articles right to your feed from MSN Messenger.

InstantFeed and immedi.at

InstantFeed and immedi.at are web services that update you via chat when a feed is updated. Both support AIM, ICQ, MSN and Jabber. Its a great way to monitor important feeds. I’ve been getting errors from immedi.at lately, so InstantFeed maybe your best bet.

Peeko

This new Firefox extension is bringing immediacy to the web by allowing you to chat, in real-time via IRC with others viewing the same page you are.

peeko Real time

Its a great way to find and converse with like-minded people. In fact, why not try it out on MacMerc.com?

Gmail

Gmail recently rolled out in-browser AJAX powered chat in Gmail. For Mac users, its an opportunity to use the Google client for chat. It’s a great way to get in instant contact with others. Instead of email, you can now chat immediately if they are online. If for some odd reason you lack a Gmail invite, shoot me an email (brian AT macmerc DOT com) and I’ll invite you.

OpenWengo

Finally, text chat is great but… OpenWengo is here with a Mac (Tiger-only for now) Firefox extension that lets you take and make SIP compliant VoIP calls from inside Firefox. Now you can ring up a friend without leaving your browser. The Wengo kids aren’t the only one with this idea. Look for a similar extension coming for the Mac from Zoep.

Ah, isn’t instant gratification great? Enjoy your new instant ‘net services but remember that microwave popcorn will still take two and a half minutes. Sorry.

Brian