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Most of us are well acquainted with annoying e-mails from the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) e-mail servers complaining our inboxes are over quota. Although our official storage space is around 200 megabytes, our e-mail folders cannot exceed 50 percent of that. And even worse, our inbox is limited to 40 megabytes. In these times of free unlimited storage, when companies like Google boast "never delete e-mail again" slogans, our FAS services are unacceptably limited...
...candidate can, for instance, convince someone sufficiently separated from the campaign to create anonymous e-mail aliases from which to send campaign literature. Moreover, e-mail violations, unlike postering violations, are most likely to go unreported. Only the smallest slice of campus would notice a campaign violation in their inbox when they...
...according to Sheth. Microsoft’s platform, “Windows Live @edu,” is currently being used by five universities, and 57 institutions have enrolled worldwide, according to Nikki Reed, a spokeswoman for Microsoft. Major selling points in the companies’ pitches are larger inboxes for students—both Microsoft and Google offer more than 2GB of storage space—and interfaces that are more user-friendly than usual university Webmail systems. Harvard students with FAS e-mail accounts are currently allotted 40MB of inbox space. The e-mail addresses, which would continue...
...sort of build up this network. Then it really feeds itself. You get a really good tip, you write a really good item, and then more people will become tipsters. 8.FM: How many tips do you usually receive?C: It’s usually a handful every day. The inbox is a pretty amazing wonderland of claims about students and professors. We sort of have to gauge if it’s true or newsworthy and amusing enough to get a post. Especially post Aleksey our readers have been pretty instrumental to the site. 9.FM: Speaking of Aleksey, have...
...intellectual and political climate” to a meeting discussing why “being selfish is not wrong.” I’ve never understood why the objectivists believed altruism irrational and dishonest, and I was particularly irritated to see such nonsense in my inbox. Yet their views are but symptoms of a much larger problem here at the College...