Review Comments (4) Screenshots (8) Questions & Answers (13/3) Votes (112) Awards (3) Wiki  

From Software Informer

Jump to: navigation, search

Programs:IncrediMail

IncrediMail
100px‎
200px
Screenshot of IncrediMail Email Client
Developed byIncrediMail Ltd.
Latest release5.86 (January 19, 2009)
Operating systemWindows 98, ME, 2000, XP, Vista. MS Internet Explorer 5.5 or higher
TypeEmail Client
LicenseFreeware (advertising-supported)
Websitehttp://www.incredimail.com

IncrediMail Xe is an advertising-supported email client for the Microsoft Windows operating system by IncrediMail Ltd.[1] that offers the ability to add e-mail backgrounds, Emoticons, Ecards, Sounds, Animations, and 3D effects from directly within the client. The program supports standard POP3 and IMAP4 mail protocols. HTML mail formatting is supported and heavily marketed as one of the program's strong points. The program also includes animated notifications, advanced message filtering, an automatic spellchecker, and font style preferences [2].

Contents

[edit] Licensing

IncrediMail Xe is offered free of charge for an unlimited amount of time, but relies on various channels to generate income: the sale of additional products and services [3]; the sale of upgraded content within the IncrediMail Gold Gallery [4]; and advertisements displayed in the application, within the Website[5], and animated Incredimail advertisements at the bottom of outgoing email. A premium version of Incredimail is available for purchase which removes the advertisements from both the program and the emails sent through it, and adds extra features.[3]

[edit] History

The concept of IncrediMail evolved in 1999, when one of IncrediMail's founders watched the movie “Mission: Impossible” and saw a graphically rich email program being used in the film. He began to search for such an email program only to discover that it didn’t exist in the real world. Incredimail was thus intended to represent the vision of “Incredible Email” as seen in the movies.[6] First released in Q2 2000, IncrediMail reached 1 million downloads in Q2 2001. In March 2001, IncrediMail released its first set of purchasable products. By the end of 2002, IncrediMail reached 10 million downloads. By 2004, 40 million downloads were passed with a rate of a million new downloads per month.[7] IncrediMail also collaborated with Yahoo! to offer IncrediMail Personals, Oberon Media to offer IncrediGames [8], and Babylon (program) to offer automated translation. In January 2006, IncrediMail Ltd. entered the public market in New York (NASDAQ: MAIL)[9].

[edit] Languages/Lingual support

The IncrediMail email client is offered in 12 languages: English, German, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Dutch, Swedish, Chinese Traditional, Chinese Simplified, and Japanese [10]

[edit] Features

Features included within IncrediMail’s basic version (available free of charge) are Emoticons, email Backgrounds, Ecards, Sounds, Animations, 3D effects, advanced message filtering, and email notifiers. Many spam filtering techniques are offered, and a particular focus seems to be made on features that users request frequently (easy blocking of senders by name, easy sending of rejection messages from the client). However, it is worth noting that while these are frequently requested features by end-users frustrated with spam, they do more to make the user feel empowered than to actually combat spam - in particular, "noisy" rejection of incoming messages is considered a very bad idea as it rarely does anything but abuse innocent third parties (see Backscatter). Incredimail also supports the current industry standard filtering features such as automatic image blocking and creation of message rules. A subscription-based spam filtering system is also available at an additional recurring charge.

[edit] Technical

There is much controversy over the usability and viability of HTML email in general. Due to its heavy and very visible use of HTML formatting in its default out-of-box configuration, Incredimail finds itself at the forefront of this controversy as what many of the detractors of HTML email consider an extreme "worst-case example" and many of the proponents consider "fun and friendly." Some argue that the program increases message sizes (and consequently download times for recipients) and uses more bandwidth than text-only or HTML mail. In addition, the (default) heavy use of HTML and embedded images in Incredimail is difficult to tell from spam in automated filters; at times high-profile pump-and-dump penny stock spammers have used this similarity to sneak their payloads through those automated filters.[11] Preferences within the program can be set, however, to send mail in a plain-text format. In addition, Incredimail makes extensive use of the registry and system directories which is not properly rolled back with its uninstallation script. This has frequently required manual registry edits to fix the damage if a user decided later to remove the program.[12] It also keeps the default homepage pointed to Incredimail and the browser search hijacked by Incredimail.

[edit] Legal

There has also been been controversy over Incredimail's privacy policy, which stores what the policy refers to as "General Usage Patterns," including "the number of messages that a user sends; the number of messages that are read; what elements of the service are most often used; user log-in dates and time; and message size data." No personal data is collected, and the above collected data is used to improve the product and "conduct and publish aggregate, anonymous, market research results."[13] Verbiage from the EULA Incredimail users must accept in order to install the program is also a source of controversy, as this EULA provision at one time specifically granted the Incredimail corporation "an unrestricted, perpetual, irrevocable license to use, reproduce, display, perform, modify, transmit and distribute" any email sent using the program itself. This text has since been modified to restrict these rights grants more reasonably to unsolicited email sent to the Incredimail corporation. However the current EULA allows Incredimail to change the EULA at any time ‘without notice or release of new software’ allowing Incredimail to do whatever they wish with users data without asking permissions beforehand. The EULA for Incredimail is available online at http://www.incredimail.com/english/termsofuse.asp, and can also be viewed by downloading the actual program and beginning the installation process.

[edit] References

  1. "IncrediMail Download Page". http://www.incredimail.com/english/splash/splash.asp. 
  2. "Incredimail Feature List". http://www.incredimail.com/english/splash.aspx. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Description of IncrediMail products". http://www.incredimail.com/english/order.asp?id=53529. 
  4. "IncrediMail Gold Gallery". http://www.incredimail.com/english/order_gold.asp?addon=IncrediMail&dc=d. 
  5. "About IncrediMail Advertising". http://www.incredimail.com/advertising/index.asp. 
  6. http://coheda.typepad.com/israel/2006/03/ofer_adler_incr.html
  7. "IncrediMail Ltd. Company History". http://www.incredimail-corp.com/about/company_history.asp. 
  8. "IncrediMail Collaborations". http://www.incredimail-corp.com/partnerships/co_branding.asp. 
  9. "IncrediMail Press Release - IPO". http://www.incredimail-corp.com/press_center/press_release/pr_jan_31_06.asp. 
  10. "IncrediMail's reference page to 11 languages versions". http://www.incredimail.com/english/download.asp. 
  11. Dynamoo's Blog: "Incredimail" spam
  12. OLEXP: "Cannot Find Incredimail.exe" Error Message When You Open Attachment After Removing Incredimail
  13. IncrediMail - Full Privacy Policy

[edit] See also

Wiki: Views

Wiki: Personal tools

Wiki: Toolbox

Tag cloud
Download siClient

Email Address:

Password:

Register now »

Forgot password?

This text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License