Am I correct in assuming that there is no way (yet) to receive email (other than pulling it from somewhere else of course)?
I would like to switch from my old-school "web host" to PA, but the most important thing they do for me is email.
True, I could buy a "domain name and email" package -but that is pretty much what I have now.
I don't personally need to send mail via PA (it would be nice, but I assume that opens a can of spam worms), and I'm guessing that most personal users could similarly send via a relay provided by whoever they got connectivity from (?).
[Maybe pythonanywhere.com could find a supplier/partner that could do domains and email either invisibly behind PA or even as a 'special-offer to PA customers' (and perhaps even relaying incoming email (via https to a nominated PA URL?) -so we can do whatever we want with it, in python on PA ) I vote for using a smaller company (and one that doesn't shoot elephants like 'Daddy does) ]
Mail would also be a good 'available with a paid account' carrot.
More generally: [blather warning]
I'm thinking: "what could I use a handy Python powered personal cloud-puter for?"
Note the "personal". For me, the interesting thing about PA is the way it feels like a missing link between PC and Internet (more like a programmable modem than Heroku et al -if you see what I mean)
So what could I use it for? Granted, 'no-install, web-based' is a big win BUT more interesting to me is what PA can do that I can't do on my local PC or phone or portable-python-on-usb-drive-on-my-car-keys-puter
What does always-on, always-online, static-ip, isolated-for-security get you?? For me, the big win is email. If I could receive email and then filter, triage, forward, route and collect mail using a bunch of Python scripts running on my PA-puter -I would be happy indeed.
So there.
'Zep' (tragically, born without a real name)