free email
Wondering what the different restrictions and limits are on the free tier level available from various SMB-focused email service providers (ESPs) and newsletter tools? I was, too! Thankfully, “Intentionally simple email marketing and automation platform” Smaily put together a helpful chart that maps it out, and so I’m sharing it here, with their permission. (Having trouble reading the small type? Click on the graphic to enlarge it as desired.) Here are a couple of things to keep in mind: Of course, Smaily’s goal is to sell you on Smaily. I don’t know much about their platform and this is not an advertisement for that platform. Be sure to do your own research and testing. I will say that they were kind enough to put this chart together and allow me to share it here. I do appreciate them taking the time to pull this information together. It’s got a lot
Did you know? You can sign up for a free att.net email account right this very second! And it’ll cost you nothing at all! I signed up for one myself, and it was a perfectly fine and easy process. Why would you want to do this? AT&T makes note of, the mailbox comes “in partnership” with Yahoo Mail, making it easy to assume that this is just a Yahoo Mail account with the att.net domain. But, those of us deliverability nerds out there remember that AT&T has some extra filtering here and there, before passing messages off to Yahoo. Or they used to. Do they still? The MX record for the various AT&T domains points to a different mail gateway — not the normal Yahoo Mail one. So the infrastructure configuration certainly implies that there could be some filtering happening a bit differently for an att.net mailbox versus a “regular”