Why use a special-purpose email address?

This morning, I suddenly remembered an article I wrote about ten years ago and published in one of the local papers in Sydney. The article, now reloaded in this post, was titled “How to create a permanent email address.”

In my original article, I suggested ways to creating an email address using your favorite domain name or in fact, your own domain name, which you would like to be your permanent email address.

The suggested technique simply involved setting up a virtual (now called, forwarding) email account which you could fashion more aesthetically than the server-restricted, 6-character, and imagination-stretching username email address. Emails sent to a virtual email account were forwarded to a real email account like an email address issued by an Internet Service Provider (ISP) with a mailbox which held your incoming emails until these were downloaded to your local drive.

It was actually a very simple technique which utilized the forwarding capabilities of mail servers, with your “permanent email address” being no different from a postal office box. With prior arrangements with the postal office, your mails would follow you wherever you go or the postal office would hold your mails until you pick them up.

Today, this technique is still very much in use.

We use the technique, and have in fact extended its application to servicing special-purpose function or event. For example, our websites group has created an email address which identifies the department to which the message is addressed. The contact form in this site for example uses an email address which redirects the messages sent through it to my real email account. If the technique is used for a special-purpose event or function, the email address can be deleted once the event or function is completed. The email address can also be deleted without any hesitation if it is receiving a lot of spams.

A virtual or forwarding email address has so much flexibility that you can customize it to your personal preferences for a more aesthetically fashioned looking email address. Or it can be customized to cater to a specific business need.

And if you’re using it as a permanent email address, you have the flexibility to change ISP. No need to tell your contacts that you changed your email address because you changed ISP.

The facility to set up a virtual or forwarding email address has been around for as long as I remember. We wonder at times why we still see email accounts of website owners and managers being displayed on their web pages. Or, why we also see even writers (and bloggers, too!) of popular and large news sites displaying their email addresses on their posts.

Have they ever wondered why they are receiving a lot of spams in their mailbox.

I am thinking of writing another similar article like: Why you should not use a webmail?

What do you think? Share us your thoughts.

Reprinted from A Matter of Sharing

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The memories of Sept 21

September 21, 1972 is the date many remember as the date Philippine President Ferdinand E. Marcos signed Proclamation No. 1081 placing the entire Philippines under martial law.

But unknown to many, there were two other occasions in the Philippines when the power of the Philippine President to declare martial law was invoked.

… Continue to full article at Philippine Studies…

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Rizal Park Campbelltown redevelopment nearing completion

L-R: Mayor Paul Lake, Rizal Park Movement Founding President Lourdes Kaiser, Consul General Anne Jalando-on Louis, and Rizal Park Movement PRO and Founding Member Max Lopez during their recent site inspection visit.
L-R: Mayor Paul Lake, Rizal Park Movement Founding President Lourdes Kaiser, Consul General Anne Jalando-on Louis, and Rizal Park Movement PRO and Founding Member Max Lopez during their recent site inspection visit.

Mayor of Campbelltown, Cr Paul Lake, said the redevelopment of Rizal Park in Campbelltown’s Anthony Drive, Rosemeadow is continuing and has now entered the next stage, the Campbelltown City Council reported in its website recently.

The city council also reported that the construction of electric barbecue facilities and landscaping had now been completed together with a new picnic shelter area, more than 500 plants and trees, and a new entrance sign with the words ‘Rizal Park’.

‘The latest works further reflect the passion and commitment of members of the Campbelltown and Region Filipino Community Council and the Rizal Park Movement of Campbelltown, who have worked tirelessly to bring this transformation to fruition, and I commend their efforts,’ Mayor Lake was quoted.

Rizal Park is a 2.6 hectare reserve off Anthony Drive, Rosemeadow within the Campbelltown district.

It was in 1987 when the park was named after the Philippine national hero, Dr Jose Rizal, after lobbying by the Philippine-Australian Friendship Association.

In 2009, the master plan to redevelop the park was finalised by the city council. The key features of the plan included a playground facility, a bust / statue of Philippine national hero Jose Rizal, shade structures, BBQ facilities, toilet facilities, an informal kickabout area, landscaped areas, and carpark with entry structure.

The plan also envisaged pathways and cycleways to connect the various elements of the park and “to reflect the structure of the original Rizal Park in Manila”.

Following the completion of the master plan, the first major redevelopment work delivered was a children’s playground.

In another reporting, The Filipino Australian learned that through the efforts of Rizal Park Movement and the Philippine Consulate General’s Office in Sydney, the Department of Foreign of Foreign Affairs through the initiative of Philippine Ambassador to Australia Belen Anota and DFA Assistant Secretary for Asia Pacific Affairs Maria Theresa Lazaro, was able to secure a donation of a statue from renowned Filipino Sculptor Eduardo Castrillo for installation in Rizal Park Campbelltown.

The statue will be about five metres tall, made of hollow bronze, and weigh about 500 kilograms.

Once completed, the statue will be donated by the artist to the Philippine Government for turn over to the City of Campbelltown.

The statue is scheduled for installation in June 2012 in time for the conclusion of the national hero’s sesquicentennial birth anniversary.

Consul General Anne Jalando-on Louis, Rizal Park Movement Founding President Lourdes Kaiser and PRO and Founding Member Max Lopez, along with the other founding members of RPM, are the Filipino community’s liaison with the Campbelltown City Council on the park enhancement program.

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$5m for phone calls

It’s very shocking to read that the Immigration Department spent $5 million in year 2009/2010 on government-issued telephone cards for immigration detainees and asylum seekers to call relatives overseas and to talk to their lawyers.

That was what today’s Daily Telegraph revealed in an “exclusive”. (“$5m to phone home”, p. 3)

The cost, “reluctantly released to federal parliament”, according to DT, was on account of cards provided to detainees by the company contractor to run detention centres.

What’s more shocking to learn is that detainees are also compensated to the tune of $50 a week – which they can spend on topping up their cards or buying other items such as cigarettes – “by participating in English classes, sport, and life skills.”

Now that’s something!

We don’t think many taxpayers spend that much money on phone calls. And many have given up smoking not only because it is a health hazard but because smoking is very expensive.

With about 5500 people reported to be in detention, that’s an average of approximately $900 a year per detainee.

And to think we’re just paying $480 a year for our mobile calls!

The Immigration Department has really so much explaining to do – not only to the Opposition but to us, taxpayers.

What do you think? Share us your thoughts.

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Are Philippine banana growers passing up a golden opportunity?

Price of bananas in one Metro Sydney shop, August 1, 2011

Price of bananas in one Metro Sydney shop, August 1, 2011

The last time we wrote about bananas, we reported the increasing prices of locally produced bananas, first on account of drought which was followed by flooding in Queensland.

Up to now, we have not included bananas in the grocery basket except once or twice to satisfy the cravings of some family members.

The price of bananas has at one point reached around $14 a kilo making the fruit one of the most expensive fruits, and a luxury to serve on the dining table.

The price situation of many months ago has not changed. The cheapest I have seen is something like $6.99 a kilo, still about seven times the $0.99 a kilo which was more than enough to discourage importers from bringing in bananas from other banana producing countries like the Philippines.

We have gathered that Philippine banana growers can still export their produce to Australia subject to meeting Australian quarantine standards. We wonder why they have not cashed in on this opportunity? Have Philippine banana growers given up, after a very long 10-year wait to obtain the nod of Australia’s Biosecurity?

We have been regularly checking Biosecurity Australia’s updates at the Dept of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry website, but have not seen any new post about Philippine bananas since more than two years ago when the results of the final Import Risk Analysis were released followed by the determination allowing Philippine bananas to enter Australia.

No new commentaries have also been made in websites that were actively opposing importation of Philippine bananas?

On this note, it is very pleasing to see our posts on Philippine bananas being indexed top 5 or top 10 (using keyphrase “Philippine bananas”) by Google, Bing, Yahoo and other major search engs.

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If you are a dual citizen, can you run for a Philippine public office?

Global Filipino Nation, an international coalition of Filipino leaders and organisations in 30 countries which aims to “Building the Global Filipino Nation for Good Governance”, has recently put out a white paper recommending a 5-point plan to address current deficiencies in Philippine election laws including a restriction on dual citizens from running for a public office.

Among the GFN recommendations are internet-based voter registration and voting, removal of affivadit to return, voter registration as a requirement for departing OFWs, and setting up of registration desks at the Department of Foreign Affairs and overseas employment agencies.

Read the full text at The Filipino Australian

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Case Study: Copyright Infringements

What is the worst thing that could happen to a writer, editor or publisher?

In our view, it is when another publisher or a writer charges you for infringement of their copyrights for re-printing an article or using a material without the permission of the owner or in breach of the owner’s conditions.

Using a copyrighted material without the permission of the owner is not only intellectually dishonest. It is illegal.

Full article at The Filipino Australian

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WFA-PAP reaches out Lumad children

Filipino Australians helped in funding and distributing education materials

Tibi-Tibi school children proudly toting their backpacks
Tibi-Tibi school children proudly toting their backpacks

The Outreach Program of the Worldwide Filipino Alliance – Pandaigdigang Alyansa ng Pilipino (WFA-PAP) is bringing smiles to the recipient indigenous people (IP) school children of Tibi-Tibi Elementary School.

School supplies including backpacks, books, DVDs and other education materials were distributed June 22 by WFA-PAP volunteers to a hundred Grade 1 pupils.

The WFA-PAP volunteers were led by Commission of the Poor’s Romy Lagahit and Filipino Australian Leo Ceniza, an accountant based based in St Marys NSW.

Tibi-Tibi Elementary School is located in the Municipality of Talaingod, Davao del Norte, more than 100 kilometres from Davao City.

“WFA-PAP’s outreach program in Tibi-Tibi will be an ongoing activity,” said the alliance chair Lolita Farmer, adding that there are “plans to have scholarship for IPs to go to high school.”

Ms Farmer also said that the group is reaching out IP school children “not because we pity them but because of our obligation to help those who are in need, part of humanity.”

In a communication with this website, Ms Farmer also acknowledged the donations of the Filipino Australian community to the recent Tibi-Tibi activity.

She said these included Linda Alvarez Barnes (Forum), Jun Relunia (PASSCI), Chris Pilao (APSL), and AGAPI.

WFA-PAP is an Internet-based group of overseas and Philippine-based Filipinos whose goal is to assist in the development efforts in the Philippines and assist overseas Filipinos in uplifting their working and living conditions.

Officers and volunteers of WFA-PAP include USA-based Prof Cesar Torres (WFA president), Jeddah-based Arman Muleem (WFA executive vice-president), Fe Jagna (WFA-PAP secretary), Sandy Elizaga (WFA-PAP treasurer), Romy Lagahit (Commission of the Poor), community worker Prof Armanda Bueno, Thailand-based Chona Bollos, Paris-based WFA director Susie Barbieri, Filipino Australian Leo Ceniza, and USA-based WFA members Victor Barrios, Ted Aquino, and Rob Ceralvo.

//Photos: WFA-PAP / Fe Jagna

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A thing in the Internet called “copyrights”

What is the worst thing that could happen to a writer, editor or publisher?

In our view, it is when another publisher or a writer charges you for infringement of their copyrights for re-printing an article or using a material without the permission of the owner or in breach of the owner’s conditions.

Using a copyrighted material without the permission of the owner is not only intellectually dishonest. It is illegal.

This is what we are currently pursuing. A copyrighted article of The Filipino Australian was re-published in other websites without our permission.

Web owners and publishers should be familiar with the legal implications of RSS, copyrights, creative commons, first publication, syndication, and re-printing in their publishing business.

When in doubt, it is always prudent, and safe, on the part of reporters, editors and publishers planning to re-publish or quote a material to first contact the owner of the material. Not everything in the Internet is “free information”.

The following warning is found in our Terms of Use:

Reproduction, Reprinting and Copying
This site contains copyrighted material and that, apart from any fair dealings for the purposes of private study, research, criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright Act, no part of any article or image published in this site may be reproduced or used by any process or in any publication, without the written permission of emanila.com. A written permission shall be issued by emanila.com after receipt of a signed application with reprint or reproduction fees, where applicable.

And the following warning is displayed on the footer of this site:

Materials on this site are copyrights of their respective owners. For reprinting permission, please contact us.

We don’t know how these could have been missed!

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