One of the most salient features of our Tech Hiring culture is that there is so much bullshit. Everyone knows this. Each of us contributes his share. But we tend to take the situation for granted.
Are there other Email providers who support this username+whatever@example.com feature?
I give this advice very often and feel bad when people don't use Gmail. Gmail being the market leder, it would be surprising that nobody copy this trick.
From what I have found, at least outlook and icloud support this feature. I think you can just search for "plus addressing ", it should pretty quickly give you an answer.
One of the most salient features of our Tech Hiring culture is that there is so much bullshit. Everyone knows this. Each of us contributes his share. But we tend to take the situation for granted.
Subadressing: Addresses of the form something-filter@example.com, using various separators between the base name and the tag, are supported by several email services, including Andrew Project (plus),[16] Runbox (plus), Gmail (plus),[17] Rackspace (plus), Yahoo! Mail Plus (hyphen),[18] Apple's iCloud (plus), Outlook.com (plus),[19] Proton Mail (plus),[20] Fastmail (plus and Subdomain Addressing),[21] postale.io (plus),[22] Pobox (plus),[23] MeMail (plus),[24] MMDF (equals), Qmail and Courier Mail Server (hyphen).[25][26] Postfix and Exim allow configuring an arbitrary separator from the legal character set.[27][28]
Are there other Email providers who support this
username+whatever@example.comfeature?I give this advice very often and feel bad when people don't use Gmail. Gmail being the market leder, it would be surprising that nobody copy this trick.
From what I have found, at least outlook and icloud support this feature. I think you can just search for "plus addressing ", it should pretty quickly give you an answer.
Thanks that's exactly what I was loooking for
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email_addres...