Trying to do some digital cleanup and after writing down all the services i'm using it's a bit of a mess.
Different services uses different email accounts. In an ideal world it would all be consolidated under one email, but that seems impossible at this point.<p>Interested in your setups. Do you use Gmail or another service to sign up for stuff?<p>Bonus question: How many email accounts do you regularly use?
I recommend setting up an aliasing service no matter which provider you ultimately use. Blur or Anonaddy (sure there are others..) will give you a burner email unique for each new service you sign up for which forwards to your real email, and if one day one of them gets spammy or is sold to a data aggregator, you can just get rid of it entirely.<p>If I'm going to be actually corresponding a lot with an address (these days this is the exception in my email usage) I'll skip this middleman and make an alias/sending identity in fastmail.<p>To more fully answer your question, I believe I now have hundreds of unique email addresses in use. But it doesn't feel that way.
I moved everything to Fastmail. Sometimes I'll create an alias if I want to easily control a funnel of emails, but usually the one email address rules them all.<p>The big thing is to use an email address at your own domain so you can switch to new email providers in the future. Using an @gmail address is being unnaturally chained to one company.
For 20ish years I ran my own mailserver, on a Debian box. All my mail was accessed directly via mutt/lumail, from beneath ~/Maildirs<p>Last year I trialed fastmail, but didn't like it, so now I'm paying for GSuite. I have two users setup - a domain admin, and my own "real" user.<p>I've been using unique addresses at my domain ("reddit@example.com", "lwn@example.com", etc) so I had to setup an address-map to get around the alias-limits. But that niggle aside I've been enjoying the way it all works out.
Just don't forget that email is generally used for password resets, so if you have the same email for everything and someone gets access to your email, they may be able to reset <i>all</i> your passwords.<p>I'm in the process of switching all my services to a domain I own, so I will be a little less screwed in case google decides to randomly shoot me (like they do sometimes).
I've been using <a href="https://mailbox.org" rel="nofollow">https://mailbox.org</a> and really like it.<p>I only disclose my actual email address to a few people. For everything else, I set up specific addresses such as shopping@, health@, bank@, etc using a domain I own, and all those forward to the Mailbox address and get filtered accordingly.
I have two main emails - one for actual correspondence and one for signing up to services and such.<p>I also spin up new emails for trials and such every once in a while, and delete/abandon them afterwords.<p>I do most of this through ProtonMail. You can't use your own mail client with them without paying, but their webmail is fine enough.
Newsletter subscriptions + other random stuff = Gmail<p>Bank + stock investing account + other valuable stuff = own domain powered by O365 "Essentials" mail for ~$2 pm. Working well :). Didn't want Google snooping on these. So..
I gave up on self hosted mail about a year ago. It’s one of the best things I did for my nerves. Now I use Microsoft hosted mail. It’s $5 bucks a month, and it’s (probably) not as data mined than Google.
I run my own server, using different addresses at the domain for each service I sign up with and also for each person I communicate with; all of them are set up as aliases to one account.
I use the one provide by my domain name registrar. I get 5 email accounts for free with Gandi.<p>I regularly use 2 email accounts, one work, one personal.