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Hash Email Extractor Plus : A Complete Software to Extract Email ID’s from any Source

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Hash Email Extractor Plus is professional software developed to collect e-mail addresses. Hash Email Extractor Plus is a great helper in conducting email marketing campaigns. Every email campaign requires large lists of email addresses. It’s almost impossible to extract the email addresses manually. Email Extractor is a perfect tool for building your customers’ email lists using the files on your local Hard disk or from the websites. Email Extractor retrieves all valid email addresses without duplicates.

It uses the Google Search to Search for Email Id’s related to your Search Keyword.
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Features of the Hash Email Extractor Plus are :

1. Extracts Email Id’s from files such as text fles, rtf, csv, xml, html, doc, xls, docx, xlsx.

2. Extracts Email Id’s from Google or Yahoo Account.
3. Extracts Email Id’s from Outlook Contacts and Mails.
4. Extracts and Hunts for Email Id’s Through Google Search.
5. Option to Remove Duplicate Email Id’s and sort the Email List,

6. Option to save the Email Id’s in Text file, Rich text file, Word Document file, Excel file.
7. Extracts Email Id’s from Websites utilizing best of you net speed.

8. Extracts Email Id’s from your Gmail and Yahoo Accounts.

9. Hash Email Extractor is an extremely easy-to-use and straight forward software.

10. It is a multi threaded software to complete your work fastly.

11. It retrieves absolutely all valid e-mail addresses and generates an output file with only good and well formatted e-mail addresses without duplicates.

12. It is a completely Independent software , does not require any third party application.

13. Option to Edit / Copy / Delete extracted email id’s available.

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Yahoo to drop its Briefcase Service

IT NEWS

Yahoo plans to discontinue its Briefcase service, which allows people to store files online for free.

The service will be shut down on March 30, the company said on Wednesday. Yahoo is warning users to retrieve or delete their documents before that date.

Briefcase, which offered 30MB of online storage, was launched almost 10 years ago. However, “usage has been significantly declining over the years, as users outgrew the need for Yahoo Briefcase and turned to offerings with much more storage and enhanced sharing capabilities”, the company said in a statement.

There are now many alternative online storage services to Briefcase. Notable rivals include Microsoft’s SkyDrive, a Windows Live service that offers 25GB of free storage.

There are also signs that Google may be preparing a free online storage product called GDrive. Recent reports have pointed to a reference to GDrive in an online, recently updated file associated with its Google Pack bundle of free software, which includes Chrome and Picasa. The file text says that GDrive “provides reliable storage for all of your files, including photos, music and documents [and] allows you to access your files from anywhere, any time and from any device — be it from your desktop, web browser or mobile phone”.

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At last but not the Least, YAHOO to enter Social Networking

IT NEWS, Recent News

After almost all the biggies in WWW  industry entered the Social Netowrking business, like MICROSOFT, GOOGLE, MYSPACE, FACEBOOK its now time for another internet giant YAHOO to enter into business of Social Netowrking Sites.

Yahoo announced updates to several of its key properties Monday, including an overhaul of its free, web-based e-mail service. Yahoo Mail will soon feature more Facebook-like social networking enhancements, and the site has been opened up to third-party developers, giving outsiders a chance to build applications that run within Mail.

The My Yahoo customizable start-page service and the company’s Yahoo toolbar, a downloadable browser add-on, are also receiving social-heavy updates this week. The new toolbar, expected to arrive in a few days, will be initially released for Internet Explorer and Windows only. Full details are on the Yahoo PR blog.

All of these enhancements fall in line with Yahoo’s new Open Strategy, a pledge by the company to open each of its key services to social networking tie-ins as well as the creation of a broad, networkwide platform developers can use to build applications into Yahoo’s various services.At a press event Monday, Yahoo execs demonstrated the new social features and showed off a few of the latest apps the company prepped for the launch.

The demo having apps look great. An app from Xoopit in particular is cool. The service digs through your inbox for all of the photos your friends have sent you as attachments, or via links to external photo-hosting websites, surfacing them all in one screen. The company already has a Firefox add-on that works with Gmail. But this app is built in to the Yahoo Mail experience, no add-on required. Update: The apps’ functionality of Yahoo Mail is still in the invitation-only beta phase now. The beta will be expanded over the coming months.

The social networking enhancements to Yahoo Mail are mostly seen behind a new “Welcome” tab, which opens up behind the inbox by default To access the social features, all you need to do is set up your Yahoo Profile and add a few connections. The “Welcome” tab should show up in your inbox soon after. Click on the new tab and you’ll see details about your Yahoo profile at the top.

Below that, you’ll see messages — pulled in real time from your Yahoo Mail inbox — from friends within your social network. There’s also a news feed of your friends’ social activities on the right, a feature very much like Facebook’s News Feed. The other piece in the new tab is a list of suggested friend connections and a list of outstanding friend requests.

Seems like quite the social party. The question is, will Yahoo Mail’s 275 million monthly worldwide visitors buy in?

There are two hurdles here. First, you have to have a Yahoo Profile set up to see the social networking features, and, more significantly, in order to take advantage of the social stuff, your friends need to have profiles, too. You add friends to your network manually, like you would on Facebook or any other social network.

Yahoo is betting that these barriers won’t be too significant. But with the proliferation of social networks on the web, everyone’s tired of having to fill out yet another profile and approve the same bunch of friends every time a new social service comes online. What this system really needs is the power of data portability, so users can leverage their profiles and friend relationships they’ve already established at Google or elsewhere to quickly build up their Yahoo network. OpenID, OpenSocial and their companion technologies can solve this problem, but the services aren’t widely implemented enough within Yahoo or across the web to offer that deep level of portability.

One suggested the alternative of auto-populating a user’s social connections within Mail based on who they e-mail and IM most frequently. Yahoo said it was exploring that option, but for now, it decided to give users tight controls to decide who they trust enough to share their data with.

And there’s the rub. Requiring people to go through that profile/friending process one more time is probably asking too much. And are people even setting up profiles in significant volume? When asked about Yahoo Profiles’ adoption, company reps declined to share hard numbers.

On the other side of that barrier, there’s certainly value to be had. For example, the ability to pare down your e-mail inbox to only show messages from your closest friends with one click is very cool. And the value of the third-party apps remains in the hands of the developers creating them, but Yahoo’s elegant APIs and network of properties — photo sharing, movie ratings, video content, news — are strong enough to enable them to make something special.

If Yahoo can gain traction here, it can build a powerful social networking experience rivaling that of Facebook, MySpace and Google. But against those foes, the company has a lot of catching up to do. This new social platform may be entering the race a little too late.

So get ready to craete one more Social Networking Profile.

By Rishav Raj

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