Tag Archives: twitter

How to Use Topify Securely

topify-logoTopify is a great new service to make your Twitter life easier and more efficient.  However, it requires you to change your Twitter email to a custom Topify address which, for many people, is a bit too risky. Here are two approaches you can take to use Topify without giving up complete control of your Twitter email address.

How to Safely Use Topify with Gmail Forwarding

The standard method of using Topify requires you to change your Twitter email address to your new custom Topify address.  However, that could put you in a bind if Topify goes down or is unavailable for any reason.  The solution is to keep your Twitter email address as something you control but configure it so that it saves and forwards all Twitter mail to Topify.

There are two basic ways of doing this:

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Topify Makes Twitter Following Easier

topify-logoTopify is a great Twitter tool to help manage your follower requests. It saves you a lot of time and removes a lot of the headaches associated with new Twitter followers.  The three main features are:

  1. Improved twitter email notifications
  2. Follow back users with a simple email reply
  3. Reply to direct messages via email

I’ve been using the service for only a short time, but it has dramatically improved my overall Twitter experience and saves me a ton of time.   The two main Topify isssues are:

  1. It requires your Twitter username and password to do its magic
  2. You need to set your Twitter email to a new custom Topify address

There’s not much to be done for that first issue, but there are some options to make the second one more “secure”.  Despite these issues, Topify is well worth the effort.

Topify Feature: Improved Twitter Email Notifications

The new follower Topify email gives you all the details you need to quickly determine whether or not you will want to follow back.  This makes ignoring SPAM users and others very simple since you have all you the necessary data right in the email.  Let’s visually compare the default Twitter email with the new Topify email:

From Twitter:

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From Topify:

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Comcast Support: How Twitter Saved the Day!

This is the story of my experience with Comcast, their support teams, and how Twitter saved the day. Now, unlike many of the people I see complaining online, I have, for the most part, found Comcast to provide very good service.  I did, however, try their new Comcast TiVo DVR box and that was a complete failure…but except for that, for the most part, they have met my expectations in regards to service and support.

So, yesterday, July 1, was the day we launched VendorCity to the public.  So, it was going to be a crazy and stressful day no matter what.  However, it got off to a VERY BAD START when I awoke early to get a jump on my email. I went to send email through my ”old” company’s email server which uses port 25 and does security via IP address.  (I know…I know…it should be over secure connections..let’s just ignore that issue for now and chastise me later).

I started up Outlook and my email arrived without a hitch but I was unable to send out (but had no trouble with my VendorCity account which is hosted by Google Apps).  After a quick investigation, I was able to definitively determine that port 25 was blocked.  Well, you can imagine my surprise and frustration of having to deal with this on the day we are launching VendorCity. 

I called Comcast support and get connected with a standard first-level support person.  I made it very clear that I needed to speak with a networking expert because it appeared that Comcast was blocking port 25 (the smtp port). She asked me what email program I was using (MS Outlook) and she said that Comcast does not support Outlook (only Outlook Express) but that she would work hard to help me anyways. 

Well, that was nice of her but then she proceeded to try and walk me through lots of Outlook and Control Panel settings.  After my, oh, 10th time trying to explain to her that it had NOTHING TO DO WITH APPLICATIONS but it was a problem with my network and specifically sending SMTP email over port 25, she told me that the only way to get someone else to help me would be to hang-up and call in again. Well, you can imagine my surprise and anger when I was told that. 

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