While walking along in desert sand, you suddenly look down and see a tortoise crawling toward you. You reach down and flip it over onto its back. The tortoise lies there, its belly baking in the hot sun, beating its legs, trying to turn itself over, but it cannot do so without your help. You are not helping. Why?
Why not split the frontend and the backend apps into separate applications? That would help with the future proofing since if you wanted to switch to another javascript framework, you could do that.
I believe Trillian still continued to support other networks (as long as they could) after introducing "Astra" or whatever they called their own chat network. Most of them have died off over time or locked out 3rd party clients (AIM, Google, Yahoo, MSN, etc.).
Twitter can’t stop Trump from publishing his own website, nor shouting in a public square, nor just talking in front of the live camera he literally had in his own home but seemed unable to use.
Yes - only one domain is the primary/default, you go into their Aliases section and have to set up a foo@domain1.com to foo@domain2.com mapping (if you use the add domain wizard it makes it for you). You still need to set up your DNS records for the second domain like the first.
(I bought two domains and did exactly what you're asking - after using the first for a day or so, having decided I liked the other one better I reached in and simply flipped the dropdown and chose the second one to by the default, clicked OK and it all just worked nicely)
When I look at my set message headers, it would appear that your primary @fastmail.com (or whichever of their domains you choose) is your actual primary, and that even your first domain is just an alias to the actual user account domain.
For what it's worth I have found Fastmail's documentation to be really good. Whenever I had to look up things like configuring email clients or their spam rules I have been pleasantly surprised.
Not sure if this answers your question specifically. But yes, they do allow for domain aliases. I specifically use their wild card alias. For example, let's say I own the domain `mydomain.com`. Fastmail allows me to have `contact@mydomain.com`, `apple@mydomain.com`, `linkedin@mydomain.com`, etc. on the fly.
Nice. Thinking about it more, I think I could live without it but I have it with Gmail at the moment. I like the per-address basis though, in Gmail I add the domain alias then when I add an email alias that alias applies to all the domains.
I don't mean this as a stink to Finmark but it's also a motivating factor to move on to something that better fits your needs as you get bigger instead of trying to squeeze everything out of a service designed for helping startups.
No offense taken at all. When I was running my last company, at $25M in revenue, we couldn't find any good options for a service like this. Anaplan and Adaptive Insights had 6 figure price tags and required a lot of professional services. At some point a company might choose to leave Finmark, but our hope is to cater to startups from pre-revenue to pre-IPO.
The problem is "technically" still there in Windows it's just that Microsoft decided to push things along by creating WSL which essentially puts Linux (with Linux Containers) on Windows.
The Windows solution is the equivalent of Smart Hulk figuring out time travel.