I love the concept of InboxQ, but after a few weeks I disabled it because there were too many spammers asking the same question every day on the terms I was searching for. There needs to be some way to block certain users, and also to block certain strings of text.
InboxQ's core functionality is very nice, and I've been using it lately to help promote one of my products.<p>I haven't been able to figure out why it is delivered as a browser extension, though. It doesn't seem to add any value, and in fact makes it more difficult to use than if it were just a standard web app. For example, if I have InboxQ popped open in Chrome and then I switch to another application to do some research or copy a link, then when I switch back to Chrome, InboxQ is closed.
Installed but cannot see the toolbar in Firefox (3.6.16)
<a href="http://getsatisfaction.com/inboxq/topics/firefox_add_on_installed_but_not_visible_on_toobar" rel="nofollow">http://getsatisfaction.com/inboxq/topics/firefox_add_on_inst...</a><p>Great concept!