Gamerforever (talk | contribs) Using better word |
cleanup history section |
||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
}} |
}} |
||
'''Yahoo! Mail''' is a [[World Wide Web| |
'''Yahoo! Mail''' is a [[World Wide Web|web]]-based [[e-mail]] ([[webmail]]) service from [[Yahoo!]] It is one of the largest e-mail providers on the [[Internet]], serving millions of users. Yahoo!'s major competitors include [[Gmail]], [[AIM Mail]], [[AOL Mail]], and [[Hotmail]]. |
||
==History== |
==History== |
||
J. J. Healy, [[Yahoo!]]'s resident investment banker who |
J. J. Healy, [[Yahoo!]]'s resident investment banker who was hired in [[November 1996]], was the person who dealt with every Yahoo! acquisition. "No one knows your business like your employees," he said. According to him, the main question to consider was "should we build, buy or rent?" In truth, this really depended on the growth of competitors and the current position of the company. The main reason to buy things was to gain speed to market. |
||
⚫ | The growth in the number of [[Internet]] users eventually boosted the [[e-mail]] technology, but also created a very competitive environment where the winner was the first one to launch an e-mail service to attract potential users. E-mail because so important as it would mean regular visits from e-mail users to the website. |
||
"No one knows your business like your employees" he said. According to him, the main question to consider is "should we build, buy or rent?" In fact this really depends on the growth of the competitors and the current position of the company. The main reason to buy things was gaining speed to market "you say, 'If we don't have it in two, four, or six months, what is that going to mean to our market position?'" |
|||
⚫ | Unlike Microsoft who was always known as the "Evil Empire", Yahoo! was always well seen by most companies. This is probably the reason why Yahoo! was offered first looks at Hotmail and Mirabilis, the creator of the instant messenger [[ICQ]]. Yahoo!, however, passed on both offers as they were too expensive for the company at that time. Microsoft ended up buying [[Hotmail]] for [[United States dollar|$]]400 million and AOL bought [[Mirabilis]] for $288 million. |
||
⚫ | The growth of [[ |
||
Later there was also to be another battle to acquire the online communications company [[Four11]]. Yahoo! made a deal with the company for co-branded white pages. Gloria Gavin, who worked at Four11 as director of international business development said, |
|||
At the middle of this battle, you would find [[Excite]], [[Lycos]], [[America Online|AOL]], or [[Microsoft]]. There was one challenge: to acquire [[Four11]]. |
|||
"We always had a bias about being acquired by Yahoo! They were more entrepreneurial than Microsoft. We had a great cultural fit — it made a lot of sense." The real point in acquiring Four11 was that in [[March 1997]], the company was to launch [http://www.rocketmail.com/ Rocketmail], a webmail system that could be offered to users. In the end, Yahoo! concluded a deal with Four11 for $96 million. Yahoo! announced the acquisition [http://docs.yahoo.com/docs/pr/release128.html] on [[October 8]], [[1997]], the same day Yahoo! Mail was launched [http://docs.yahoo.com/docs/pr/release124.html]. Yahoo! Mail resulted from an acquisition rather than internal platform development because, as Healy said, "Hotmail was growing at thousands and thousands users per week. We did an analysis. For us to build, it would have taken four to six months, and by then, so many users would have taken an e-mail account. The speed of the market was critical." |
|||
⚫ | For Rocketmail users, the transition to Yahoo! Mail certainly was not easy at first. Yahoo! released various [http://help.yahoo.com/help/us/mail/rmail/ help pages] to explain the steps to follow.[http://www.flakmag.com/opinion/rocket.html] The understandable frustration of users also comes from the fact that on [[March 21]], [[2002]], Yahoo! cut software client access and introduced the [http://news.com.com/2100-1023-865570.html Mail Forwarding Service]. Mary Osako, a Yahoo! Spokeswoman, told CNET, "For-pay services on Yahoo, originally launched in [[February 1999]], have experienced great acceptance from our base of active registered users, and we expect this adoption to continue to grow." The service was offered at the cost of $29.99 per year and people who subscribed before [[April 24]] got a promotional price of $19.99 for the first year. |
||
Yahoo! already had made a deal with the online communications company for co-branded white pages. |
|||
⚫ | During the summer of 2002, the Yahoo! network was gradually redesigned. On [[July 2]], ZDNet not only announced that Yahoo.com was given a facelift but that other services like Yahoo! Mail would enter the same process.[http://news.zdnet.com/2100-9595_22-941329.html] Along with this new design, new features were to be implemented. "The new Yahoo! Mail will also include new navigation tools, such as drop-down menus in DHTML (dynamic HTML) and different category tabs, and will use a new color scheme that people can change." |
||
Gloria Gavin, who worked at Four11 as director of international business development said: |
|||
"We always had a bias about being acquired by Yahoo! They were more entrepreneurial than Microsoft. We had a great cultural fit—it made a lot of sense" |
|||
⚫ | |||
The real point in acquiring Four11 was that in [[March 1997]], the company launched [http://www.rocketmail.com/ Rocketmail], a webmail system that could be offered to the users. |
|||
⚫ | Unlike |
||
Why did Yahoo! Mail result from an acquisition rather than an internal platform development? Because, as Healy said "Hotmail was growing at thousands and thousands users per week. We did an analysis. For us to build, it would have taken four to six months, and by then, so many users would have taken an e-mail account. The speed of the market was critical." |
|||
Apart from Four11's CEO, Mike Santullo, Steve Victorino, VP of business development, all Four11 workers had been well integrated in their new company, and all of them found a good job to fit them. |
|||
For Rocketmail users, the transition to Yahoo! Mail certainly was not easy at first. Yahoo! released various [http://help.yahoo.com/help/us/mail/rmail/ help pages] to explain the steps to follow.[http://www.flakmag.com/opinion/rocket.html] |
|||
⚫ | The understandable frustration of |
||
⚫ | During the summer of 2002, the Yahoo! network was gradually redesigned. On [[July 2]], |
||
⚫ | |||
*2 gigabytes of e-mail storage |
*2 gigabytes of e-mail storage |
||
Line 57: | Line 43: | ||
*No promotional taglines in messages |
*No promotional taglines in messages |
||
*No account expiration |
*No account expiration |
||
*choice of stationaries for your composer |
*A choice of stationaries for your composer |
||
"The launch of Yahoo! Mail Plus is part of Yahoo!'s strategic initiative to offer premium services that deliver innovative, reliable and relevant services to consumers," said Geoff Ralston, senior vice president, Yahoo! Network Services, and creator of the original Yahoo! Mail technology in 1997. "In just five years, Yahoo! Mail has grown from one million to tens of millions of users, illustrating how consumers have made e-mail an essential part of their daily lives. Through Yahoo! Mail Plus, Yahoo! continues to demonstrate leadership and innovation by offering consumers the industry's most complete and powerful e-mail solution." (Press Release) |
"The launch of Yahoo! Mail Plus is part of Yahoo!'s strategic initiative to offer premium services that deliver innovative, reliable and relevant services to consumers," said Geoff Ralston, senior vice president, Yahoo! Network Services, and creator of the original Yahoo! Mail technology in 1997. "In just five years, Yahoo! Mail has grown from one million to tens of millions of users, illustrating how consumers have made e-mail an essential part of their daily lives. Through Yahoo! Mail Plus, Yahoo! continues to demonstrate leadership and innovation by offering consumers the industry's most complete and powerful e-mail solution." (Press Release) |
||
⚫ | On [[April 1]], [[2004]], Google announced a free [[webmail]] with 1 gigabyte of storage. Though [[Gmail]], Google's e-mail service, certainly offers a large amount of storage capacity, its original lack of features kept the other webmail services at the forefront. Most of the major webmail providers like Yahoo! Mail, Hotmail, and AOL followed Google's lead and increased their mailbox storage considerably. Yahoo! was the first provider to announce 100 MB of storage for basic accounts and 2 GB of storage for premium users.[http://docs.yahoo.com/docs/pr/release1168.html] Hotmail followed suit, offering 250 MB, only 150 MB more than Yahoo! Mail, but still 850 MB beneath Google's initial whopping 1 GB. When signing up for a Hotmail account, users were initially only given 25 MB for the first 30 days, after which the account quota would rise to 250 MB. Determined not to lose customers, Yahoo! Mail then countered Hotmail and Google by increasing the storage quota of its free email accounts to 1 GB. Yahoo! Mail is still considered to be the premier webmail service by the majority of Internet users due to it's feature set and seamless integration with other Yahoo! offerings such as [[Yahoo! Calendar]]. |
||
On [[April 1]], [[2004]], Google announced a free [[webmail]] with 1 gigabyte of storage. |
|||
⚫ | Though [[Gmail]], Google's e-mail service, certainly offers a large amount of storage capacity, its lack of features kept the other webmail services at the forefront. |
||
Proof that innovative webmail features were gaining importance for the user experience could be observed when, on July 9th, |
Proof that innovative webmail features were gaining importance for the user experience could be observed when, on July 9th, Yahoo! acquired Oddpost, a strong webmail offering that simulated a desktop email client like Microsoft Outlook.[http://oddpost.com/yahoo.html] Oddpost had new innovative features such as drag-and-drop support, right-click menus, RSS feeds, and a preview pane, but it also had incredible speed, using e-mail caching to shorten response time. Both the Yahoo! Mail and Oddpost teams have been busily working to merge the innovations of both products into a seamless, better service. |
||
==Features== |
==Features== |
Revision as of 22:30, 15 April 2006
You must add a |reason=
parameter to this Cleanup template – replace it with {{Cleanup|January 2006|reason=<Fill reason here>}}
, or remove the Cleanup template.
Top: A typical Yahoo! Mail inbox. Bottom: Yahoo! Mail beta. | |
Developer(s) | Yahoo! |
---|---|
Type | E-mail, webmail |
Website | http://mail.yahoo.com/ |
Yahoo! Mail is a web-based e-mail (webmail) service from Yahoo! It is one of the largest e-mail providers on the Internet, serving millions of users. Yahoo!'s major competitors include Gmail, AIM Mail, AOL Mail, and Hotmail.
History
J. J. Healy, Yahoo!'s resident investment banker who was hired in November 1996, was the person who dealt with every Yahoo! acquisition. "No one knows your business like your employees," he said. According to him, the main question to consider was "should we build, buy or rent?" In truth, this really depended on the growth of competitors and the current position of the company. The main reason to buy things was to gain speed to market.
The growth in the number of Internet users eventually boosted the e-mail technology, but also created a very competitive environment where the winner was the first one to launch an e-mail service to attract potential users. E-mail because so important as it would mean regular visits from e-mail users to the website.
Unlike Microsoft who was always known as the "Evil Empire", Yahoo! was always well seen by most companies. This is probably the reason why Yahoo! was offered first looks at Hotmail and Mirabilis, the creator of the instant messenger ICQ. Yahoo!, however, passed on both offers as they were too expensive for the company at that time. Microsoft ended up buying Hotmail for $400 million and AOL bought Mirabilis for $288 million.
Later there was also to be another battle to acquire the online communications company Four11. Yahoo! made a deal with the company for co-branded white pages. Gloria Gavin, who worked at Four11 as director of international business development said, "We always had a bias about being acquired by Yahoo! They were more entrepreneurial than Microsoft. We had a great cultural fit — it made a lot of sense." The real point in acquiring Four11 was that in March 1997, the company was to launch Rocketmail, a webmail system that could be offered to users. In the end, Yahoo! concluded a deal with Four11 for $96 million. Yahoo! announced the acquisition [1] on October 8, 1997, the same day Yahoo! Mail was launched [2]. Yahoo! Mail resulted from an acquisition rather than internal platform development because, as Healy said, "Hotmail was growing at thousands and thousands users per week. We did an analysis. For us to build, it would have taken four to six months, and by then, so many users would have taken an e-mail account. The speed of the market was critical."
For Rocketmail users, the transition to Yahoo! Mail certainly was not easy at first. Yahoo! released various help pages to explain the steps to follow.[3] The understandable frustration of users also comes from the fact that on March 21, 2002, Yahoo! cut software client access and introduced the Mail Forwarding Service. Mary Osako, a Yahoo! Spokeswoman, told CNET, "For-pay services on Yahoo, originally launched in February 1999, have experienced great acceptance from our base of active registered users, and we expect this adoption to continue to grow." The service was offered at the cost of $29.99 per year and people who subscribed before April 24 got a promotional price of $19.99 for the first year.
During the summer of 2002, the Yahoo! network was gradually redesigned. On July 2, ZDNet not only announced that Yahoo.com was given a facelift but that other services like Yahoo! Mail would enter the same process.[4] Along with this new design, new features were to be implemented. "The new Yahoo! Mail will also include new navigation tools, such as drop-down menus in DHTML (dynamic HTML) and different category tabs, and will use a new color scheme that people can change."
In November of the same year, Yahoo! launched another paid service: Yahoo! Mail Plus.[5] Yahoo! Mail Plus offers a number of features, including:
- 2 gigabytes of e-mail storage
- 20 megabyte message size limit
- Ability to send up to 10 attachments per e-mail
- POP Access and Forwarding
- Archiving of e-mail messages to a hard drive for offline access
- Ability to send messages from Yahoo! Mail using other e-mail domains
- 200 blocked addresses and 50 filters to help screen unsolicited e-mails
- No promotional taglines in messages
- No account expiration
- A choice of stationaries for your composer
"The launch of Yahoo! Mail Plus is part of Yahoo!'s strategic initiative to offer premium services that deliver innovative, reliable and relevant services to consumers," said Geoff Ralston, senior vice president, Yahoo! Network Services, and creator of the original Yahoo! Mail technology in 1997. "In just five years, Yahoo! Mail has grown from one million to tens of millions of users, illustrating how consumers have made e-mail an essential part of their daily lives. Through Yahoo! Mail Plus, Yahoo! continues to demonstrate leadership and innovation by offering consumers the industry's most complete and powerful e-mail solution." (Press Release)
On April 1, 2004, Google announced a free webmail with 1 gigabyte of storage. Though Gmail, Google's e-mail service, certainly offers a large amount of storage capacity, its original lack of features kept the other webmail services at the forefront. Most of the major webmail providers like Yahoo! Mail, Hotmail, and AOL followed Google's lead and increased their mailbox storage considerably. Yahoo! was the first provider to announce 100 MB of storage for basic accounts and 2 GB of storage for premium users.[6] Hotmail followed suit, offering 250 MB, only 150 MB more than Yahoo! Mail, but still 850 MB beneath Google's initial whopping 1 GB. When signing up for a Hotmail account, users were initially only given 25 MB for the first 30 days, after which the account quota would rise to 250 MB. Determined not to lose customers, Yahoo! Mail then countered Hotmail and Google by increasing the storage quota of its free email accounts to 1 GB. Yahoo! Mail is still considered to be the premier webmail service by the majority of Internet users due to it's feature set and seamless integration with other Yahoo! offerings such as Yahoo! Calendar.
Proof that innovative webmail features were gaining importance for the user experience could be observed when, on July 9th, Yahoo! acquired Oddpost, a strong webmail offering that simulated a desktop email client like Microsoft Outlook.[7] Oddpost had new innovative features such as drag-and-drop support, right-click menus, RSS feeds, and a preview pane, but it also had incredible speed, using e-mail caching to shorten response time. Both the Yahoo! Mail and Oddpost teams have been busily working to merge the innovations of both products into a seamless, better service.
Features
Yahoo Mail has the following features:
- Free version: 1 GB quota. 10 MB attachments, plus protection against spam and viruses. (See: DomainKeys) Advertising is displayed on the screen while working with the e-mail account. Users can also read mail from a POP3 server through Yahoo! Mail. However, if they want to send mail from a distant SMTP server, they must upgrade to a Plus account. Accounts not logged into for four months get deactivated (The account can be retrieved but all personal data is lost). Every free Yahoo! account will be deleted after an inactivity of 4 months. Early in 2006, Yahoo! Mail introduced aliases to its repertoire of features. users could now add a (single) alias username containing a dot character for a pre-existing account.
- Plus version: 2 GB quota. The Plus service offers POP3 access—meaning that the e-mail account can be accessed through e-mail clients (Mozilla Thunderbird, Outlook, Eudora, etc.) that work with the POP3 protocol. When working with the account over a web browser, no ads are displayed. This type of account has additional spam and virus protection. Yahoo! is charging $19.99 per year per user for Yahoo! Mail Plus. Users of Yahoo! affiliated Internet service providers, such as SBC, BT, and Rogers have all the features of the Plus version included as part of their accounts.
- Additionally, a user can pay $35 per year to have up to five custom e-mail address and domain name.
Future
In September 2005 Yahoo! began beta testing a significantly enhanced version of their e-mail service, based on Ajax scripting. The look and feel of the new version is designed to mimic a desktop e-mail client, with drag-and-drop capabilities and shortcut keys for managing messages. Wide-scale public release of the new version is expected in 2006.
Controversy
In 2002, it came to light that Yahoo! Mail had filters that changed certain words and word fragments into other words. "Mocha" was changed to "espresso", "expression" became "statement", and perhaps most damaging, "eval" (short for "evaluation") became "review". The widespread effects of this can be seen by using the Google search engine to find such nonsensical terms as "prreviewent", "reviewuation" and "medireview".
When questioned about these changes, Yahoo! explained that the changed words were common terms used in Web scripting, and were blacklisted to prevent hackers from sending damaging commands via the program's HTML function.
As of Tuesday, February 7, 2006, the Yahoo! Mail filters no longer substitute certain words for others. Although the change may have occurred prior to this date, Yahoo! Mail now prepends an "_" (underscore) to certain words and word fragments.
Sending a test email from a non-Yahoo! Mail account to a Yahoo! Mail account with the words "Mocha", "eval", "Javascript," and "expression" in a sentence resulted in the Yahoo! Mail filters prepending an "_" (underscore) to those words, resulting in "_Mocha", "_eval", "_Javascript" and "_expression". This prepending obviously removes the threat of the words acting as commands via the program's HTML function by rendering them as non-commands or unrecognizable commands.