Yes, you can pay a toll online in addition to paying in person or by mail.
Yes, you can renew your license in person, online, or through mail.
Yes, you can renew a passport in person at a passport acceptance facility or agency, in addition to renewing it online or by mail.
Facebook, MyLife, and other websites allow you to search for a person's e-mail address with only their name. You have to find a site that person actually uses in order to find this information, though.
Mail recall is not possible unless you have admin access to the server where the mail was addressed, and then only if the person hasn't read it already. In short, no.
There are plenty of reasons a person should consider paying an electricity bill online. An electricity bill can actually be costly to pay, if a person constantly has to use stamps and envelopes. Sometimes, if a person is running late on a payment, then he or she may also need to pay the bill as fast as possible. To mail a check overnight can be quite expensive, while if a person chooses to pay a bill online it will only take seconds. A person can pay a bill the day it is due by using an online feature, without worrying it will be late.
You can do that by sending a CC to the person. CC stands for carbon copy of mail. A person receiving a CC is only able to receive the copy of the mail.
"On mail, 'to the order of' means that the recipient specified on the envelope is the only person authorized to receive and open the mail."
No, you cannot get a car title online. You may only do it in person or through the mail. The two methods are used to help prevent fraud and because not every state has an advanced enough system to allow an online process.
Only written on paper, not from online or e-mail. In ink.
It is possible that you are the only real person in the room, but it is also possible that others are real as well. The concept of reality is subjective and can vary from person to person.
Having someone's mail does not mean they will mail you. The person has to know your mail. If he/she mails you, then only you receive it.
There are a few ways to stop unwanted mail from clogging up your mailbox, you can hire a mail blocking service (small fee), switch to electronic billing and statements whenever possible, and strike out the name of any mail you receive for a former resident (this lets the postal carrier know the person named on the mail no longer lives at this address).