• On CBS.com: Sexy women of CBS
November 14, 2007 6:03 PM PST

3D Mailbox flies the unnecessary skies

Posted by Peter Butler
  • Print
3D Mailbox(Credit: 3D Mailbox)

Back in July, I thoroughly thrashed 3D Mailbox for producing a solution to a problem that doesn't exist. Does anyone really need visual representations of e-mail messages? Isn't e-mail scary enough with all of the bogus sweepstakes offers and pharmaceutical enticements?

Based on the relative success of VisitorVille, an application for visualizing Web traffic, World Market Watch decided to venture into the e-mail space with 3D Mailbox, an application I labeled "extremely useless" this past summer.

The graphics of the free level are adequate; the avatars themselves are less polished yet still fairly attractive. However, the software is a total resource pig. It constantly grabs up to 95 percent of my CPU, unless reined in by adjusting the process' priority Process Explorer, which can't solve the problem completely.

Cargolux plane

Attachments of more than 70K require cargo planes that change based on destination.

(Credit: CNET Networks/3D Mailbox)

The new addition of a Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) level to the package for subscribers might be an enticement for some aviation buffs like Daniel Terdiman, but I still can't recommend the application because of the high memory usage and resource-hogging behavior. Also, it's a Windows-only application. Mac users should consider themselves lucky.

Of course, the main problem with the software is not the implementation, but the idea itself. I appreciate the creativity and effort involved in bringing such a concept to fruition, but I don't know anyone who wants to spend more time managing e-mail.

In short, no matter how you jazz it up, e-mail is just no fun.

For a sneak peek at the new LAX level for 3D Mailbox subscribers, take a look at this CNET Download.com gallery that includes screenshots from the LAX level as well as the original, free beach level.

Recent posts from Webware
gOS Cloud: browser-based OS for Netbooks
Five financial Android apps to regulate your dough
Kontain launches a new, pretty blogging service
DeWolfe: 'Cautiously optimistic' about MySpace in recession
Amazon's database service enters public testing
advertisement

About Webware

Say No to boxed software! The future of applications is online delivery and access. Software is passé. Webware is the new way to get things done.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Webware topics

In the news now

E-tailers eye Cyber Monday

After a better-than-expected Black Friday, retailers' hopes are up for a sale-heavy day online. Predictions, however, are mixed.


The other digital-TV transition

As digital TV migration nears, confusion mounts as some cable customers see basic cable channels disappear from their analog packages.


Photos: Space station marks a decade aloft

The first pieces of the International Space Station went into orbit 10 years ago. Now a full-fledged lab facility, it continues to grow.


advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right