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Thread: Organising your Emails?

  1. #16
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    3rd September 2005 - 08:19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Cajun View Post
    personally i am not a big fan of webbased mail, but i also have a laptop which i carry with me, which has my work email and personal email all on one which is handy.
    so use gmail as a standard pop or imap email account and leave all your shit on their server.

    delete off your pc when you're done safe in the knowledge that you have a remote backup.

    fuck i'm good.

    edit: and I'm pretty sure you can use it to check other email servers too.

  2. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ixion View Post
    I do exactly the same. And I can find things real easy. Search is your friend.
    Typically work off memory and organised locations myself. Hmm, might need to try that.

    Quote Originally Posted by skelstar View Post
    Thunderbird. Love it. Lots of 'extensions' as well but havent had the time to figure out what they can do for me.
    And when you do find a good one, it doesn't actually work properly. Calendar extension comes to mind. Can't handle MS Outlook invites and doesn't integrate with Thunderbird properly - as in, doesn't auto start when Thunderbird starts up.

    Quote Originally Posted by Drunken Monkey View Post
    FP, if it's work Email then maybe you could sort out a process that everyone in your office can adopt. If it's your personal Email, then do whatever works for you.
    Personal email system runs fine, work is the problem.

    Quote Originally Posted by Drunken Monkey View Post
    Please don't FILE important messages in TRASH (that's why it's called TRASH!!!!!) It's the first place the IT staff will, without any warning, remove messages from permanently if there are ever disk space/DB size issues on a mail server.
    Over here at 127.0.0.1 that's not a problem, but think with the upcoming change to an outsourced hosted Exchange server, this will no longer be the case.

    Various Gmail posts
    Got one for personal use and use it mostly as an remote usb memory stick.
    90% of the time spent writing this post was spent thinking of something witty to say. It may have been wasted.

  3. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by Flyingpony View Post


    Got one for personal use and use it mostly as an remote usb memory stick.
    Good for that do it at uni heaps

  4. #19
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    1st August 2006 - 12:23
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    Quote Originally Posted by Flyingpony View Post
    Like many people I've trouble with sorting my emails. Certain types of emails are easy to handle, such as junk and mailing lists, filters take care of those. It's all the other emails which cause the problems. I've not found a single simple method to handle all of them. Obviously while they've active, inbox is fine but what happens afterwards? Trash bin

    Have tried the sort away according to project, sender, monthly date, and a few others. But nothing has been fool proof. The only method which works really well is "don't check your email"

    Right now, my half-baked system is as follows:
    - As long as it's something active, it's stays in the inbox. Once the topic is finished, it gets deleted along with the sent items. Should it be important to keep, then the inbox items are placed in senders sub-folder and sent items in a sub-folder beneath that - this approach is still not right.
    - All sub-folders are placed beneath a 'year' folder, so they get frozen when a new year starts and thus can be moved onto CD
    - Junk email is shift-deleted.
    - FYI/Tips are stored according to who was the original sender - encase there are multiple, simply keep the latest incarnation.
    - Mailing lists and notification emails are picked up by filter and dealt with accordingly.
    - And don't empty the email trash bin either for obvious reasons

    There's got to be a better way, can you share with us yours please

    P.S. Which email client are you using?
    I'm a black sheep using Thunderbird but will probably be forced shortly to use M$ Outlook
    I use Lotus Notes at work and Outlook at home - I use the 'rules' tool. Sorts my emails into folders as and when they arrive. I sort them by sender (hubby's emails go into 'From Dave', friends emails go into 'Personal', emails from the IT geeks go into 'IT' and so on). It's not perfect but it works most of the time and the odd few that get through the system just get moved - but there's a lot fewer to move than if I had to manually sort all of them!
    Hanging on in quiet desperation is the English way

  5. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Flyingpony View Post
    ...Personal email system runs fine, work is the problem.
    Then my suggestion would be to stop thinking about your Email as a seperate entity and try putting your folder organisation into something that resembles other processes at work. If you're already doing that, then I'm out of free suggestions

  6. #21
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    3rd October 2004 - 17:35
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    Pegagus mail FTW!
    Then I could get a Kb Tshirt, move to Timaru and become a full time crossdressing faggot

  7. #22
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    19th September 2006 - 22:02
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    I love Pegasus Mail use it at home and at work... would be lost with out it
    I also have my own email server would be lost without that too...
    Last edited by NighthawkNZ; 28th September 2006 at 07:05. Reason: Doppy spelling mistakes

  8. #23
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    Outloook and rules works for me. Just as others have mentioned as long as you have set up a good set of rules and folder structure you should be fine.
    Automatically seperating emails into various folders as they come in means you can address the important stuff first and leave the personal or non-work related stuff (or stuff you don't want to do) until later.

    I don't delete any emails either. My PST files total 3GB+ and my sent folder has 15,000+ mails in it dating back to 1999. I use "Advanced Find" regulary as having near instant access to old emails is invaluable.

  9. #24
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    28th April 2004 - 11:42
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    Spend 20 bucks on a domain name. Redirect it via a yahoo email account (the best anti-spam system I've used period). Forward it on to an IMAP server so I can access it from various PC's with no syncronisation problems and I don't have to worry about losing it all if my laptop gets stolen etc (Orcon have free IMAP email).

    Give trusted friends one email address. For fill out forms, online forums and stuff use something like
    theircompany@yourdomain.com

    That way, if 6 months down the line you get spam sent to theircompany@yourdomain.com then you'll know who's been passing on your email address. It also makes it dead easy to organise your mail and spam filters.

    Use Gmail as a backup if you must but to be honest, I wouldn't trust them to pass it on to the American infadel federalis.

    Oh...Outlook is good but it's completely rubbish at dealing with IMAP servers.

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