Keyword-search your Yahoo Mail
So you're sitting there using your favorite toy, your Yahoo inbox, and getting more used to it as an alternative to your regular mail client. And then you think, "drat, I can't search through all my messages to find the one I want like I can with Outlook!"
But of course, you can. There is a link to "search mail" in plain view. It works fast, and you'll be digging up that unanswered invitation to tea from your Aunt Gladiola in no time. No excuses!
Yahoo Mail has a lot of other features you might not be using. Are there any features they don't have that you think they should? Drop us a line, we'd like to hear about it.
Posted by Andrew
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Monday, September 16, 2002Online Subscriptions in their Infancy?
Terry Semel, Yahoo's CEO, just told Fortune Magazine that "every dollar that comes in from any premium service is incremental to us. Last year we had zero. Literally."
Yikes! Well, better late than never, one supposes.
Looking at all the interesting, useful, fun stuff that Yahoo is just beginning to charge for can open your eyes to the possibilities. Remember when Hotmail and Yahoo Mail had just come out, and you and three friends were the only ones to bother with them? Now, everyone uses them. The same growth curve is going to take effect for the most useful, more advanced stuff that we've become addicted to.
Yahoo! Fantasy Football (and baseball, etc.), a slick, high-powered service, is mostly free. It now comes with a range of potential add-ons, but the revenues are probably nothing to shout about just yet. But here's a cool twist: league managers can buy a package of premium services on behalf of everyone in their league. Right now, no one is using this stuff, but the math is favorable. You've got league administrators potentially helping Yahoo make $200 in revenue next year from a fantasy league where they might have made $20 total this year. I certainly didn't go dig around for the godawful fee Yahoo would charge me to sign my whole league up for the premium stuff, but it may not be long before this becomes a huge business. Yahoo's interactive fantasy league software (which many currently still use for free) already blows away many of the cottage-industry software makers in this area, and they can always make it better at relatively low cost.
I'm not spending megabucks on Yahoo services yet - a larger mailbox for $30 and the Java Real-Time Fantasy Stat Tracker for $9.95 - but that counts me amongst the one million Yahoo users who have bought a premium service. Those revenues are bound to grow quickly with each passing year. From a revenue standpoint, Yahoo has nowhere to go but up.
Posted by Andrew
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Sunday, September 15, 2002We Can't Answer You Unless You Leave a Real Address, But Even Then, We Don't Owe You a Response, Dept.
Sometimes you get emails from some really paranoid people. Just in, source unknown:
CONTACT FORM INFORMATION
-------------------------------------------
Topic: Editorial Inquiries
Issue: Comment
First Name:
Last Name:
E-mail: block@traffick.why
Phone:
Comments: I see now that you are running a block on FAST-news.
This looks almost like China.
Why are you blocking FAST-news ?
--
CHINA????
Blocking???
Sounds like someone needs to take some deep breaths.
Posted by Andrew
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