derrick wrote on Feb 6
th, 2007 at 2:23pm:
Yes I found out about the uninstall procedure by accident after I had installed it, but as far as I know it is just a matter of setting up your e-mail account again!! Although you can detag e-mails if you want, it also does not tag multiple e-mails, you need the paid for upgrade for that.
If you go down the route of installing the "readnotify" please let me know how it goes.
I have ruled out using
www.readnotify.com as the outgoing emails appear to get routed via their website (all sorts of privacy implications there) and more importantly their website is as slow as a dog and all pages take ages to appear today.
Equally importantly its an annual renewable subscription service and they limit you to only 2,000 outgoing emails a year on even their most expensive service. This is only just over 5 per day, which is far too low for a paid service. The claims they make are impressive about what you can tell has happened to your email (a lot more than MSGTAG's top service offers) but only because it has gone via their servers and had all sorts of stuff added to it I would imagine
Quote:Didn't realise that, I just thought every e-mail was acknowledged
If you go for the top MSGTAG service you can go for the option where people who only support plain text email reading can't open your email at all unless they agree manually to send a confirmation via the website that the message has been received but obviously a lot of people then might just not read your message fearing it is spam or a virus if its not someone that you normally communicate with.
As to uninstalling it does just seem to be a case of replacing the word localhost in your outgoing SMTP server for the email accounts in question with the actual SMTP server of your email provides that was originally there. Obviously though the program's installer ought to be able to put this back in when it uninstalls as it clearly has this info to send your outgoing email on to once it has reformatted the email to contain MSGTAG website hyperlink. I suppose they couldn't be bothered as the uninstalling types are generally all ex customers, although it might have helped avoid negative feedback.
I will give the free version a try for a while and see if anyone complains about the visible MSGTAG and website hyperlink in the email or if anyone has any problems reading the email. It seems this free service along with using Read Receipt when I send to a CC distribution list may be all I need. Also I may use Read Receipt still for an important message as this gives you a belt and braces approach as many company email systems don't support HTML format emails (necessary for MSGTAG to work) but do support Read Receipt acknowledgement.
I see that Outlook Express does not support Read Receipt requests. I suppose this may be why you looked for this service in the first place? I use Microsoft Outlook 2000.