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Unnecessary Capitalization In E-Mail Addresses


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Overtaking the over-sized jumbo return address label (sic - first there was oversized, now there's jumbo oversized) as the current object of a befuddled/bemused WTF-ness whenever witnessed...

I mean, jimsangrey@spliffco.com gets the same result as JimSangrey@spliffco.com so...why bother. Are you supposed to feel warmer & fuzzier from communicating with JimSangrey than you are jimsangrey? Or if I show you that I'm JimSangrey and not jimsangrey, does that signify that I'm somehow more "personal" or something? Or am I valiantly resisting the cold impersonal digital world by representing as JimSangrey instead of jimsangrey. Good luck on any of that...

No matter how I look at it, it still comes down to this - it's a hyperlink (or will be) to click on, and if I don't know who or what I'm sending it to, I shouldn't, and if I do, then...why?

People going nuts with the foo-foo these days and trying to take me with 'em. I'll go, but only up to a point!

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Perhaps capitalization makes it easier to parse some people's names?

Details, please!

Where I've seen it has been in a self-contained corporate environment, and it looks just like another attempt to project (self)importance.

But you're saying that if people do it in real life, there might be a practical reason?

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Yeah, in some cases it can make the name easier to read, things like FredDietz@blah.com rather than freddietz@blah.com.

That said, there are lots of people who don't understand that email addresses are not case-sensitive.

My secretary at work, who is over age 65, refuses to believe that email addresses are not case-sensitive, even though several people have told her that. I can hear her from my desk laboriously spelling out email addresses to people on the telephone, making a huge point of which letters are capital and which are small. There is no way to stop her believing this.

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Yeah, in some cases it can make the name easier to read, things like FredDietz@blah.com rather than freddietz@blah.com.

That said, there are lots of people who don't understand that email addresses are not case-sensitive.

Wouldn't you know it was Fred Dietz from somewhere in the email itself, either the display name, or the signature?

If you're talking about in a personal drirectory, won't there always be a display name to look in?

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Yeah, in some cases it can make the name easier to read, things like FredDietz@blah.com rather than freddietz@blah.com.

That said, there are lots of people who don't understand that email addresses are not case-sensitive.

Also easier to write. I write my name beginning with capitals practically as a reflex, but have to think about it to leave it all lower case.

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Why is your member name "JSngry" and not "jsngry"?

It was a "style point" decision made long ago & far away.

Maybe you wanted us to feel warmer & fuzzier by replying to JSngry rather than jsngry, or you were signifying that you're somehow more "personal" or something... maybe you were valiantly resisting the cold impersonal digital world. ;)

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Why is your member name "JSngry" and not "jsngry"?

It was a "style point" decision made long ago & far away.

Maybe you wanted us to feel warmer & fuzzier by replying to JSngry rather than jsngry, or you were signifying that you're somehow more "personal" or something... maybe you were valiantly resisting the cold impersonal digital world. ;)

Truthfully, I had just been "online" for a year or two & didn't think about it one way or the other.

But a screen name on a bulletin board is a whole 'nother thing than an email address.

I never was able to convince the ex that the capitalization didn't matter...

This, Dear Friends, is the crux of the matter right here.

When I receive an email from somebody, I am just as taken aback and put off when I see that the sender has capitalized this first and last name within the email address in their signature as I would be if they had used all lower case when "signing" their full name.

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When I receive an email from somebody, I am just as taken aback and put off when I see that the sender has capitalized this first and last name within the email address in their signature as I would be if they had used all lower case when "signing" their full name.

I guess we all have our quirks. ;)

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