Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Turning on email in the mail for free

Alexia Tsotsis currently works at TechCrunch as a writer. She is also a blogger who attended the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, California. She majored in writing and art, moved to New York shortly after the end of the work in the entertainment industry and media. After four years of his life in New York and to attend courses in New York. ? Read More

Screen shot 2011-08-05 at 8.27.25 PM

I'm currently looking at an email from customer service to US Airways, which only return contact information, e-mail is the physical mailing address WTF — and to visit the US Airways Web site shows similar excessive reliance on postal mail. I mean, who is it? So far? Of course a bit on the site, digging shows, breathe, phone numbers!

I think someone continues to document ways to communicate — below field "Fax to mail" from Dragon's Den, the Canadian version of shark tank, proves — because the United States postal service still, you know, exists. But for how long?

While we wait for the fall of all the press, those of us who still need to send greetings to their father's day Dad (and because they are busy tracks blog posts for TechCrunch forgot to write the actual letter) are in luck ...

You have 10 days to use Snail My Email, a service that will write from the hands of your email and send it to your recipient, including a picture of a flower Petal, spray Cologne or other old-timey equipment if you so desire. Note: you only get one shot, and you must send your text along with mailing details to snailmailmyemail@gmail.com.

"In culture overflow with instant gratification and on-demand services, it cultivates gratitude for the lost art of letters," said luckom blurb on the project Web site. Damn hippies.

Actual Snail my email above.


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