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How to use a single Mail.app Archive (without losing your mind)
Merlin Mann | Aug 16 2007
For some time now, I've encouraged people to consider abandoning the byzantine folder structure that most of us used to employ to "organize" our email. In fact, this kind of functional simplicity is something I've started to think of as a pillar of Inbox Zero. In addition to helping explode the myth that most email messages have any life once their actions have been liberated, it's a healthy habit to actively remove any unnecessary systematic fiddling that doesn't handsomely pay back the effort that habitually goes into it. And, as ever: yes, some of you -- because of the incredibly unique nature of your work in an office -- will need to have 500 taxonomic mailboxes, a monthly archives by project, a person-by-person collection going back to 1983, and a multiply-copied CC'd team archives, coded by color and identified with helpful icons you found on Gopher in 1992. Sure, why not. If that's working for you, by all means, keep fiddling and filing. But, if you're ready to admit you might be turning a crank that's potentially not hooked-up to anything, here's my four favorite ways to leverage the intelligence of Mail.app for drop-dead simple archiving. [also, some prior art from April: Some handy Mail.app Smart Mailboxes] 1. Regular Old SearchAn astonishing amount of email can be found with nothing more than a search on "From," "Subject," or the occasional "Entire Message." If you just need to see whether you've ever gotten email from a person, this is the easiest and fastest way. In fact, I can't think of a way to even do this with regular mailboxes, so score one for Search. What you're not doing: Maintaining an insane collection of by-person manual mailboxes. I've heard of people who get a message that went to five people, then manually copy it to five folders -- one for each of the recipients. People like this need more work and, possibly a Ritalin. (See also below: Address Book Group Smart Mailboxes) 2. Smart Mailbox: Date RangesA Smart Mailbox for email you've received in the last 3 days will cover so much of your basic archive-retrieval needs -- meaning the times when you actually will need to see archived email (versus your elaborate fantasies about the day 10 years from now when you theoretically cover your ass and embarrass everyone you hate). Winnowing of this kind not only makes for faster scanning, but it will greatly speed up sorting and searching, of course. My "Sent in the last 4 days" Smart Mailbox also gets a big workout, as well as "To Respond -- 2 days" which is any email I've received in the last 2 days and flagged for response. What you're not doing: Building a rabbit hutch that requires you to manually drag crap into folders where the contents will die within a few days. A Smart Mailbox knows how to keep things fresh and avoids the need for unnecessary metawork and "thinking." 3. Smart Mailbox: Address Book GroupsIt's mindblowing to me that even some power users don't know about this time-saver. You can create manual or Smart Groups in Address Book that are then exposed for Smart Mailboxes in Mail.app Ideas for this?
Related: I'd also suggest making a new person-based Smart Mailbox any time you find yourself corresponding a lot with a new person, especially if it's on an urgent project that will likely sunset in the next little while. Work, work work, and then when your exchanges slow down, just delete the Mailbox and you're done. No need to re-re-re-organize. What you're not doing: Again, you're not struggling and fussing over where stuff goes in order to keep access easy. You can trust that all your stuff is one single location, then just let Apple's magic do all your heavy lifting. 4. Smart Mailbox: Tagged MessagesWith a plug-in like Mail Tags you can easily add simple taxonomic terms for the kind of messages that you used to file by hand. But, seriously: keep it as simple as you can possibly stand. Maybe even down to a few really basic categories for all non-actionable & reference email.
What you're not doing: No longer fiddling with a hierarchical maze in order to know your login and purchase info can be pulled up when you eventually need it. The Acceptable Exception: Really Old MailDepending on your life and work, you might want to consider archiving (as in removing to a backup someplace) any mail that's more than a couple years old. This should speed up your searches a bit, and will certainly improve the quality of any search-based results. But if it's important to you to keep this around, maybe create an "Annual Archive" mailbox, with manual sub-folders for all mail received in each given year. I'm not sure how much this buys you from a semantic standpoint, but my suspicion is that it might be kinder on Mail's resources to not have a single, bajillion-item mailbox (any Apple pros want to chime in?). As with all this stuff, YMMV. But consider whether the effort you put into filing pays off often enough to be worth the hassle. In my experience, it's no contest: smart wins. So, anything I missed? Got a Smart Mailbox that saves your ass from fiddly archiving? 46 Comments
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My entire history in e-mail...Submitted by piminnowcheez (not verified) on August 16, 2007 - 5:39am.
My entire history in e-mail is one of bloated, unsorted inboxes. Recently I've gotten it down to two regular folders, two permanent smart folders, and a couple of ad hoc smart folders depending on what I'm working on. I use a homemade tagging system taking advantage of the "redirect" command. The workflow goes like this: message comes in, if it's trash, then it goes in the trash; if I can answer it quickly, I do so. If it's part of a conversation with friend or family, it goes into the "Correspondence" folder. If it's something I need to keep either for posterity or because there's an action yet to be done attached to it, I redirect it to myself. In the subject line, I add a tag at the beginning prepended with "&" and if there's an action associated, add a flag. When the redirected mail comes back to me, a mail rule uses the "&" to sort it directly into the "tagged mail" folder. Then I can make a smart folder for any current projects, or search for reference mails by the tag. The great thing about redirecting is that it generates a new "unread" mail that shows up in the message count associated with each folder. The two permanent smart folders are "actions" which of course are all flagged, and "weed" which catches anything older than a certain date, so I can decide whether it should be chucked or archived off-line. And Jeremiah, as a matter of fact, Path Finder + Hazel + Spotlight tags is pretty powerful. My "downloads" and "journal articles" folders, once bloated just like my inbox, have been similarly tamed using this combo. » POSTED IN:
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