Email Checker By Mailmeteor [EXCLUSIVE 2024]
The first tick appeared. Valid. Then another. Valid. Then a red . Invalid: mail server not found. She deleted that row. Then yellow. Risky: full inbox. Another yellow. Disposable address. She frowned—someone had signed up with a 10-minute mail.
As the checker ran, it told stories. john.smith@abccorp.com → Valid. A real person. sarah.love2024@hotmail.com → Risky: typo in domain (hotmail.co)? She fixed it to hotmail.com. noreply@support-team.net → Invalid: role-based email (noreply). A dead end. email checker by mailmeteor
Maya stared at the spreadsheet. 2,847 email addresses. Her boss, Leo, wanted the monthly newsletter sent in two hours, but the company’s email service had suspended them last week for too many bounces. The first tick appeared
That night, Maya thought about the email checker. It wasn’t just a tool. It was a bouncer at the door of her server. It had saved her from blacklists, from wasted sends, from yelling at a screen. She deleted that row
The List That Almost Broke Her
Then she saw it. Row 1,412. lisa.chen@startup.io – Risky: catch-all detected. Mailmeteor warned: “This server accepts everything. Your real open rate may be inaccurate.” Maya flagged it for Leo.
And smiled.