These great sites and services will
lighten your wallet--and that's okay.
Recently I've noticed a minitrend in the letters
that I receive from readers. People have always shared their
favorite sites, services, and online utilities, but over the
past several months, a good chunk of their notes have included
something to the effect of, "It costs a little money, but...."
But what? Maybe it was inevitable. Maybe
people have gotten used to a Web in which companies must
charge to stay in business. Maybe the cream has risen to the
top. Whatever the case, many no longer scoff at paying a
little something online. And neither do I. Here are some
sites, services, and downloadable shareware I've found to be
worth the investment. (For more, see our editors' picks in "Best
of Today's Web.")
ConsumerReports.org: This should be the very
next thing you pay for online. I plunked down $24 for a
one-year online subscription and have used the site to
research TVs, cars, lawn mowers, and more. I figure the site
has saved me far more than $24 in bad purchases.
SpamStalker: In a nutshell, this antispam
shareware replies to junk mail with messages telling the
sender that your e-mail address is no longer valid. The idea
is to fool spammers into removing your address from their
lists. Try SpamStalker for free, but pay $39 if you intend to
keep it.
Pop-Up Ad Filter: After I'd tried various
free ad filters with mixed results, several readers turned me
on to this $25 ad blocker. It works only with Internet
Explorer, but it does so effortlessly and exceptionally well.
A free trial version blocks about 40 ads--which should last
you roughly one day.
Mailshell: I mentioned this online service
last
month. For $35 a year, you get your own domain name and
the ability to control spam by creating an unlimited number of
e-mail addresses.
The Wall Street Journal Online: Free
financial news can be had just about anywhere, but if you're
still feeding a prerecession jones for everything business-
and stock market-related, WSJ.com provides the best
combination of news, information, special reports, and
analysis. An annual subscription to the site costs $59.
And there are others. For $10 a month, an
EFax Plus
account gives you a local fax number and the ability to send
faxes online. I'm even weighing the cost of PaperlessPOBox.com, a service that offers to
receive my snail mail (tossing out the junk), scan it, and
send it to me via e-mail for $30 a month and up. That's
probably too steep, but I'm intrigued.
Caveat surfer: The stuff worth
paying for is still the exception, not the rule. Even if
everything online were as good as gold, I wouldn't plunk down
my credit card willy-nilly. Still, I'll be content as long as
my total monthly expenses for Web services are lower than my
cable bill--which means I still have money left to burn on Web
goodies. So drop me a note and tell me what you pay for
online.
Illustration by: Ad McCauley