Some Holiday E-Cards Charge

Published: 19 December 2001 y., Wednesday
Slackers and tightwads accustomed to sending free, last-minute holiday e-cards may find the equivalent of coal in their in-box this year: Several major greeting card sites now charge for their wares. AmericanGreetings.com and recent acquisition BlueMountain.com, the two most popular e-card sites on the Web, now charge for access to their holiday selection and other specialty e-cards. The introductory offer: $11.95 for a year of access that lets you send an unlimited number of cards, as well as providing an address book and a reminder service. The company continues to offer other types of e-cards--such as "thinking of you" messages, free of charge. A dollar a month isn't exactly pricey. Still, it's likely to rub some users--accustomed to free stuff--the wrong way, even in this, the jolliest of seasons. Tops among alternate e-card sites are FlowGo and Hallmark.com, each of which has found ways to make money from their e-card offerings without charging subscription fees. At Hallmark the e-cards remain free, but the company hopes you'll stick around and buy some traditional cards or a gift certificate through its online store, says Kathi Mishek, a Hallmark spokesperson.
Šaltinis: idg.net
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Microsoft gives details of software-for-rent strategy

Microsoft Friday popped the cork on its plans to sell software through subscriptions, rather than through licenses as it now does. more »

Microsoft ready to send 64-bit Windows 2000 to developers

Microsoft has completed a near-final version of its 64-bit edition of Windows 2000 that will be sent to all software developers with Itanium prototype computers. more »

Intel files suit against Intelnet

The Intel Corporation has filed a trademark legal suit against Intelnet, Inc., a firm which specialises in er... intelligent networks and fingerprint verification. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Pig farmer wins top UK dotcom award

A Somerset pig farmer has been crowned Britain's top dotcom business king. more »

Man Charged with Breaking Into NASA Computers

A 20-year-old man was arrested on Wednesday for allegedly breaking into two computers owned by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory and using one to host Internet chat rooms devoted to hacking. more »

Who killed the PC?

Don't bury the beige box yet, analysts say. more »

IBM exceeds expectations with supercomputer

An IBM supercomputer designed for simulating nuclear explosions has turned out to be 23 percent faster than anticipated when the project began. more »

Vodafone boom in Europe

Vodafone AirTouch said Wednesday it added a record 6.6 million mobile phone customers in the second quarter. more »

The $144 Million Woman

Orange said Wednesday it paid 95 million pounds ($144 million) in cash for Web site Ananova, home to the first computer-generated newscaster. more »