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Solve : Email Folder Tweaking Help?

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Hello. I have a question about email. I have heard that you can direct an email to a folder from the website that sent it, by naming the recipient " [emailprotected] ", (where the "+" sign is, place the appropriate character). For example: I have an email subscription at FamilyEducation.Com, if I said that the recipient for email is [emailprotected], than their emails would always land in the folder instead of the inbox. Is this true, and how do I do it, as I'm unsure of the right character to use in place of the plus sign?What email app are you using?
What operating system? (Windows, Apple, etc)

By the way, user name seriously not cool.

Not an app, it's Gmail, and I heard that you can use this with any email service online.
My OS is Mac OS X.

And if you think that my name is offensive, I don't really care.
I've had the same username for 10 years: any derogatory associations ascribed to it are Johnny-come-latelysWell, apart from a terrorist group, Isis could refer to many things, including the Egyptian deity, a river in Oxfordshire in England, as well as several rock bands, a DJ and a pulsed neutron source at the Rutherford Appleton LABORATORY (also in Oxfordshire) so maybe I'd better retract that remark. The pulsed neutron source is definitely cool in my book.

If you can set up a forwarding rule at the other email service's server you could forward to [emailprotected]

Here's how to set it up in Gmail

http://www.viziblee.com/send-email-directly-to-a-label-in-gmail/

But you can just set up an ordinary filter in Gmail to do this

http://www.howtogeek.com/school/gmail-guide/lesson9/



Quote from: Salmon Trout on October 03, 2015, 12:35:51 PM

But you can just set up an ordinary filter in Gmail to do this
I believe that's the obvious solution. I really can't make sense of the original post in this discussion. For informational reference.
http://www.britannica.com/topic/Isis-Egyptian-goddess
has this image:

The Britannica says:
Quote
Isis was initially an obscure goddess who lacked her own dedicated temples, but she grew in importance as the dynastic age progressed, until she became one of the most important deities of ancient Egypt. Her cult subsequently spread throughout the Roman EMPIRE, and Isis was worshipped from England to Afghanistan. She is still revered by pagans today. As mourner, she was a principal deity in rites connected with the dead; as MAGICAL healer, she cured the sick and brought the deceased to life; and as mother, she was a role model for all women.



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