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Admin
Nothing really beats the thrill of being able to shout "frist!1" without really having anything to say.
Worst. Comment. Ever.
Admin
With all the good domains taken, it's hard to create an email address UNDER 16 characters these days.
Admin
With all whose people lying about its age, you need a second opinion about it.
Admin
They meant to write "How old do you feel?"
Admin
Last time I bought something online, it didn't even warn me about my email address length. The final confirmation page just had my email address without the last two characters.
Needless to say, I never got an order confirmation or shipment confirmation from them. Luckily, my item did in fact arrive.
Admin
An email address with four letters might theoretically even be possible.
Suppose for some reason you are in a position where you can manipulate the zone data for a two-letter country-code TLD, say "aa". You could then insert an MX record for the TLD itself, pointing to whatever mail server you like. Next, create a user with a one-letter username on that mailserver and you can have an email like "a@aa".
I don't think any TLD actually does that, though.
Admin
I was reknewing my passport recently and even the paper form only permits a 30 character email address. Mine is only 2 characters shorter than that.
Admin
My address at a customer site is 38 chars long :-)
Admin
I can't really cope with writing a comment. This may be featured!
Admin
$ dig mx tt
Admin
Admin
Next time I catch one of our developers trying to save a few measly bits in some field like that, I'm going to kill them. Straight off the bat, no mercy, splat! They're dead. I sooooo effin' hate that.
Just recently my bank "improved" their system, and in the process they shortened a field that is used to write a short explanation of a payment, which is then visible in the monthly statements. It used to be quite handy, I would write "Office rent, January 2008" and stuff like that - but now it's just 20 characters so it's friggin' impossible to write anything important in it.
It used to be 40 characters. Just for the hell of it, let's say I'm making 20 payments a month (usually a lot less), so that's already a whopping 400 characters saved a month, or 4800 a year. Almost 5K ! Oh yeah, that's worth saving allright - in just about a million years it'll be as many characters saved as can fit on an average USB stick. Woo hoo!
So you, yes you, next time you think of those field lengths: think big, or be prepared to die a horrible, script-language infested death with a mouse with it's vertical axis movement reverted!
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I guess at that time recycling was brand new, and joke-worthy. Anyway, the image stuck and I remember it all these years later.
Admin
To quote Groucho Marx: "A man is only as old as the woman he feels".
Admin
Connected to 66-27-54-138.san.rr.com. Escape character is '^]'. HELO foobar 220 www.nic.tt ESMTP Sendmail 8.12.8/8.12.5; Wed, 7 May 2008 08:52:53 -0400 250 www.nic.tt Hello ....@..... [....], pleased to meet you MAIL FROM: t@tt 250 2.1.0 t@tt... Sender ok RCPT TO: t@tt 550 5.1.1 t@tt... User unknown QUIT 221 2.0.0 www.nic.tt closing connection Connection closed by foreign host.
Why don't they have t@tt? It's the only emailaddress that makes sense.
Admin
Next time I catch an accountant copying and pasting a Word document into one of my text areas, I'm going to bap them with a rolled up magazine.
Admin
FAST won't be too happy about the use of a recording capture device in the cinema... how many years is that being afraid to pick up the soap?
Admin
Admin
There are 21 TLDs that do it.
Admin
"You are not permitted to use any camera or recording equipment in this cinema. This will be treated as an attempt to breach copyright. Any person doing so can be ejected and such articles may be confiscated by the police. We ask the audience to be vigilant against any such activity and report any matters arousing suspicion to cinema staff. Thank you."
Act now against Active Desktop Recovery Piracy!
Admin
Actually, the .ai tld has an MX on it, so x@ai may be a valid email address.
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OK, hyperbole perhaps, but you can see what I'm getting at.
Admin
Think again;
host -t mx tk. tk mail is handled by 100 atafu.taloha.tk.
:)
Admin
Admin
Some have in the past. I have a friend who was apparently once reachable at ji@gr. (Now try to get a modern MUA to accept that as a valid address--you begin to understand why properly recognizing all valid addresses takes a three-page regex.)
Admin
Email address verification is difficult when people don't understand how they are formed... I once had a telemarketer (flogging a product that sounded marginally useful) not accept my email address of "[email protected]" because they insisted that it had to have a .com or .net or something between the csiro and the au. I told them to just try it and see. Come to think of it, I don't think I ever got the email from them.
Admin
I concur. Great T-shirt. Just spell "its" correctly.
Admin
The real WTF,F,F,F! here is that stupid iRobot site dares to ask about Brent Rockwood's birth date. Why the heck do they need such personal information? Well, this is not iRobot's fault per se - looks like this is just a survey buy a nosy InsightExpress.com company - but I still find such surveys very invasive and inappropriate.
Admin
I saw the same thing last night at the cinemark in American Fork, UT right after the previews for Iron Man.
This WTF was not the theatre's fault methinks.
Admin
n!ai is. My friend Ian snagged that one. He also took ?@ai, which has even fewer actual letters.
Admin
[quote user="Kivi"][quote user="Romuald"]Actually, the .ai tld has an MX on it, so x@ai may be a valid email address.[/quote]
Sorry, that's n@ai, of course.
Admin
Of course you didn't get email from them. After all, you don't have a valid email address, right?
Admin
In all fairness (with the email length), they did say "between 4 and 16 characters" with no mention of inclusive versus exclusive.
5 is between 4 and 16, 4 is not :)
Admin
An email address with four letters might theoretically even be possible.
I've applied for a job, at least partly because it would give me an email address with only 5 characters in the hostname, including the dot, e.g. @xy.TLD . My personal best was already at @xy.com, but getting it down even further was just too tempting.
Admin
If I ever meet the guy who thought of having a second "verification" email text entry, I'll shake his hand and get his autograph. His brilliant expose of the mindless copying that most web developers do is Nobel-worthy.
Every other web developer that puts dual email address fields on a page should be executed. That should measurably increase the average global intelligence level.
While we're at it, maybe just go ahead and kill everyone who tries to "validate" email addresses. There is exactly one way to properly validate an email address, and it requires no regexes, or much code at all. And it's been around about as long as email has: just send a verification code to the address entered, and wait for the user to enter that code, or fix his email address and try again.
All other schemes are broken, because they don't verify a damned thing that matters; which is that the address can be used to communicate with the user.
Admin
Can we come up with a suitable pre-execution torture for the nitwits that not only insist on having you enter your email address twice, but deliberately inserts some Javascript to stop you using cut-and-paste?
Admin
Woah... You learn something new every day...
Admin
The real WTF is you buying from a telemarketer. They will only keep calling us as long as people like you ensure that the practice remains profitable...
Admin
Under normal circumstances (i.e. when you don't have your address at a TLD mailserver), 5 characters for an email is still not possible. The shortest possible "normal" email address would be two characters for the TLD, one for the SLD, one for the dot, one for the @ and one for the username. Makes six.
Admin
Isn't Active Desktop Recovery the first in a trilogy?
◦ Active Desktop Recovery ◦ Safe Mode ◦ Restore Point
Admin
This is actually very true. Online surveys often ask questions twice to see if the respondent is actually paying attention.
Admin
How very Jeffrey Dahmer of you.
Admin
And if you pan a bit to the right on the Sam Ash user registration page, you'll see that while they don't understand long email addys, they do support SIXTY character passwords!
[image]Admin
They're required by law (COPA) to ask your age and verify you're older than 13. In the US, at least.