Thanks for breaking alias search
I use alias emails for everything. One for every company, I often disable them to stop spam & re-enable before placing an order or if I phoned and need a response. It was quick & easy, it worked.
Before today, I'd go to aliases & type a bit of the company's name in the search box. I contain the company name within the email address so it is easy to identify. It cannot be at the beginning because it can cause problems sending an email from Welches7yuj7@fastmail.com to welchesfruit@wherevever.com So I give each alias prefix before a bit of the company name so it would be Treeswelches7yui7@fastmail.com. I could search the alias list in a second have the correct email address by typing in welches. I can see if it is enabled or not & change it if needed. Easy Peasy Until Fastmail ruined it. Search is now broken. Searching for Welches shows no matches & the word none appears in the Alias section. If I search for anything that isn't the start of the email address it can no longer recognise it. So if I search for trees I get the entire alias list. ~ Alias search broken by the update ~ Demanding a password to change alias settings (which I do every day) is a major pain & utterly pointless. This is about as sensible as making us give a password to change the background For me this has turned using my email into a bloody nightmare |
I see what you mean! I also use multiple aliases but mine are of a different form, eg
pz.df.qa.word.2784@domain and I find that the search will find things if it looks for some or all of any of the individual parts of that, so for example p or pz d or df q or qa w or wo or wor or word 2 or 27 or 278 or 2784 etc will all narrow down the display in a useful way, but search will not find anything if I type in eg d.2 or as you found, 84 Here, all my aliases are listed in alphabetical order so it's not impossible to find things. And (Firefox's) Edit -> Find will also find substrings of alias names. I hope you're going to raise a ticket with FM and let them know about this. Posting it here is no use... |
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If you have your own domain and you have a wildcard set up, you can invent identities on the fly without having to use aliases at all.
Provided you keep a record of them somewhere searchable, such as a simple text file, that's all that's needed, I have found. If you start getting spam at a particular address, just block mail to that address. |
Not to mention the fact that FastMail has always said to allow up to fifteen minutes to allow any changes regarding an alias to take effect. The OP's method appears to be questionable in the first place.
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I don't agree that there is anything questionable about the OP's system.
It used to work perfectly, but now, suddenly, with no warning and for no good reason, it doesn't. That is infuriating. He is right to be cross. |
The OP was getting lucky—it really isn't practical to rely on a feature like that when it can have a lag time at 15 minutes.
Regardless, I want the password-protection feature for aliases. The ability to delete an entire subdomain from a web interface without confirmation via password is, arguably, dangerous. Saying it is "utterly pointless" is just hyperbole. I swear, some people just like to be sarcastic, complain, and assume someone doesn't care about them, rather than attempt to approach the other party in a calm, adult-like manner. This is why Fastmail staff have stopped regularly reading this forum. This. |
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Thank you for the comprehensive recap of my posting history. Please update your records to note that it is now four posts in this thread. |
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Please no upbraiding, scolding or any other types of reprimanding! |
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- Bruce http://emdpics.somdcomputerguy.com/ |
Thanks for the pic's...:D
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