Pawn Mail

Pawn Mail

Email hosting for custom domains

1 follower

Launch tags:Tech
Launch Team

What do you think? …

Derek Shanahan
Seems a good option for side projects now that Google Apps costs dough. Caveat: Haven't tried it.
Jack Smith
@dshan good point, I didn't consider the fact that Google Apps is charging when considering the pros/cons
Lachlan Campbell
Awesome service. I'm using it for both my personal mail and for Noodles. I'm wondering about the 2GB limit though…what happens when you hit it?
Jared Epicpower
Site seems dead
Frank Fumarola
I wonder how much deliverability is effected due to the products lack of scale.
Irving Torres
This is great. The main competition would be Zohomail right? Also free? https://www.zoho.com/mail/zohoma...
Jesse Ditson

Ever since Google dropped the free version of Google Apps for Business (now known as GSuite), I've been on the hunt for a simple, easy to set up service that won't charge me for a simple mail server. For about a year, I've been using Pawnmail for my silly, prospective, and low-traffic domains.

The service is run by donations, and I love how the maintainer is upfront about how many days of runway are left. It's unclear what happens when you hit the 2GB limit -- but in my case if I'm using that much mail, I'll move to something with some semblance of a reliability promise.

For the many domains I have bought for small projects or laughs, it's great to be able to set up emails without the ceremony of the other free email servers I've found.

While I wouldn't rely on Pawnmail for business-critical emails, it does a fantastic job of being a bare-minimum, totally transparent service.

In a time where every "feature" startup seems to be trying to pivot to SaaS or Freemium, it's refreshing to see a service that is content doing one thing well and providing a truly free (as in beer) service.

Pros:

- Free (donation based, not freemium) forever

- Does one thing well

- Unlimited accounts

- Transparent maintainer

Cons:

The website itself occasionally goes down, which only prevents you from accessing webmail and/or adding users (doesn't break email).