Jano L. said:
That is not true. The thing is rather that there are some people who do not have anything better to do than to ridicule the notion of relativistic mass. But the notion is useful in many circumstances. This article explains it very well:
http://www.phys.ncku.edu.tw/mirrors/physicsfaq/Relativity/SR/mass.html
So basically, the article is saying that relativistic mass is useful for hiding the places where relativistic dynamics are actually different from what would be expected classically. Again, though, most of those cases come right back to insisting that momentum is mv. And, the invoking of GR is even worse; since, once you're in the context of GR, the quantity that would show up in the places that relativistic mass shows up in SR is not generically the same as γm.
The low point of the article, though, is where it claims that, in rejecting relativistic mass, one asserts that a heated object does not gain mass. This claim is, put lightly, a load of bovine excrement. In insisting that rest mass is the only thing that can validly be called mass, what one is really saying more technically is that mass is (up to appropriate factors of c, which I will ignore because we're cavalier like that in particle physics) the magnitude of an objects 4-momentum. This works just as well for composite objects as for fundamental ones; and, it will generally be the case that, in the frame where total momentum is 0, the mass of a composite object will be the sum of the
energies of its constituent parts. (Well, again that's in SR; but, the basic point here holds generically.) When talking about a composite system like this, we generally call this the system's "invariant mass."