E-Mail Etiquette: What REALLY pisses people off!!!

You go to your email account and it’s filled with spam that did, or didn’t, get caught. It’s annoying; it’s irritating; it makes you not want to check your damn email at all!!! I understand and I agree. Believe it or not, though, it’s mostly your own fault!

“How in the hell is this my fault?!?!” you scream.

In a shallow attempt to declare innocence, you yell, “I didn’t help this to happen, you asshole!!”

Ahhh, but you did!
When you reply to, or forward, an email, every email address on that correspondence can be read and recorded! When you are forwarding an email or sending out a ‘blast email’ use the ‘BCC:’ field. The ‘BCC:’ field will ‘hide’ all email addresses so that only the email address you’re sending to is in the email, not everyone elses!

More on protecting your email from spam:
Comprehensive resource on how to fight & stop spam email.

Prevent spamming of your publicly displayed email address.

This page will generate a HTML encoded mailto link that is reasonably ’spambot’ proof. (definition of ’spambot’)

10 tips to eliminate spam email.

More ways to beat spam email (some duplicate info).

Published in: on January 31, 2007 at 10:39 pm Leave a Comment

A Little About Banking

Due to Check 21, “Generally, a bank must make funds available for withdrawal within one or two days of deposit if the funds are deposited by certain types of checks that have a relatively low risk of being returned and the deposit meets the other conditions described at § 229.10(c) of Regulation CC,. Items generally subject to next- or second-day availability include checks drawn on the U.S. Treasury; U.S. Postal Service money orders; checks drawn on a Federal Reserve Bank or a Federal Home Loan Bank; checks drawn by a state or unit of general local government; cashier’s, certified, or teller’s checks; and checks drawn on the same branch or another branch of the depositary bank if both branches are located within the same Federal Reserve check processing region. A depositary bank also must give next-day availability for up to the first $100 of any check or checks deposited on the same banking day that are not otherwise subject to the nextday availability rule.” This law is subject to the Federal Reserve’s 12 banking districts. Every bank is in a Federal Reserve District and the way you can find out what district your bank is in will be to look at the routing number which is located between the MICR characters symbols. (These are MICR [Magnetic Ink Character Recognition] characters that are read electronically.) The Reserve Distirict that a check is drawn off of can be determined by looking at the first 2 numbers of the routing number. I.E: a bank routing number of 071001533 means that the drawing bank is in Federal Reserve District 7; a bank routing number of 121001578 means that the drawing bank is in Federal Reserve District 12; and so on. Banks are required to make $100.00 available to you on the next business day after deposit, regardless of Federal Reserve District, while local checks are to be available one or two business days after the date of deposit. Non-local checks should be available by the fifth business day after the day of the deposit.

Published in: on at 12:09 am Leave a Comment

Free 411? Get the Hell Outta Here!!

It’s true! Snopes.com (one of my favorite debunking sites) did a review of 1-800-FREE411. They go on to say that it’s a marketing driven system and that you may have to hear ads (about 12 seconds) from competing business of the phone number you requested, but that otherwise it’s free 411!

Don’t give your money to your phone company. Let someone else pay to get the information for you!

Check out 1-800-Free411’s site!

Published in: on January 30, 2007 at 8:17 pm Leave a Comment

Where to blog and how….

Well, a friend of mine said I should start a blog, so it is only appropriate that my first post should be the email that she replied to when she told me I should start the blog thing going. Here you go:

Bloggers:

I’ve found a few additional places that you may want to post previous and current blog entries to as well as being able to comment on others’ postings. Be sure to always link your name (first and last name, preferably; search engines like this) to your blog and follow it with a link to CHE, if the hosting site permits this. Each site requires registration.

First off - Ezines: why they matter and how good they are:
http://www.realestateleadsgeneration.com/Ezine_Marketing.html

eZinearticles.com: There are currently no articles on this site (which, by the way, has a Google Page Rank of 6!!). Click on the “Submit” link to register and post!
http://ezinearticles.com/?newest=1&index=30&order=ASC&cat=Finance:Real-Estate

weHow.com is a wiki. Wiki sites are sites that have been built and maintained by the public.
Real Estate page: http://wehow.ehow.com/list_13.html
Registration page: https://forms.wehow.ehow.com/

amazines.com
Real Estate page: http://www.amazines.com/Real_Estate/article_category.cfm?catid=38&title=%2CReal_Estate%2C
Registration page: http://www.amazines.com/register.cfm


And finally:
http://www.ezinehub.com/add.html# <http://www.ezinehub.com/add.html>

I do hope that this is helpful to some of you, at the very least. Happy blogging!

Published in: on January 8, 2007 at 4:02 pm Comments (1)