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I got into an offlist conversation about what I think of as normal amounts of email, and what I do to cope. If you aren't interested in how I handle large volumes of email, feel free to delete now... So. I recently asked why people used the digest-style mailing lists. If you aren't aware, a digest version is a single email sent on a regular basis by the list server that contains a table of contents and then all the email since the last digest was sent. Pro: + reduces number of email messages. + can be archived easily + can be deleted easily + reduces interactivity Con: - harder to respond to an individual message -- your mail reader needs to support digests, or else you do a lot of cutting, and then need to remember what subject goes on. - reduces interactivity - threads don't cross digests, so it's harder to see related history What I do: . I separate work and home email completely. The work addresses only get work email. If I want to subscribe to an external mailing list that's relevant to work, I still subscribe from home. . Every mailing list I subscribe to gets automatically filtered into its own folder. No exceptions. . If I give an address to a vendor or organization -- anyone except a friend -- I give out dsr-tag-mzpnVDyJpH4k7aNtvndDlA at public.gmane.org, where tag is made up on the spot to be something relevant to the vendor or organization. If I gave Sears my email address on a credit-card application, it would likely be dsr-searscc-mzpnVDyJpH52RRcisshMBw at public.gmane.org I filter thse into their own folders, too. . I don't have any sort of new email notification -- there's always new email. Always. People who need my attention urgently have phone numbers for me. . I don't use external email accounts. I run my own mail server. I ssh in and run mutt on the same machine. It's much faster than any other method. . I have two directory hierarchies: the current set, and the archive set. When a folder gets too big to load quickly -- about 5-7000 messages, these days, on an Athlon XP-3500 with 1 GB RAM -- I find a cutoff point a thousand messages back or so and move the old messages to the archive directories. . I use the Maildir storage format, which is reliable, handles every message in its own file, and doesn't need locking. I rdon't use external email accounts. I run my own mail server. I ssh in and run mutt on the same machine. It's much faster than any other method. . I run mairix -- a search utility -- in indexing mode every night via a cron job. I can search all of my current and archive directories in a few seconds, and have the results presented as a virtual Maildir. I don't claim this is the best method for everyone, but I do claim it is very efficient. -dsr- -- http://tao.merseine.nu/~dsr/eula.html is hereby incorporated by reference. You can't defend freedom by getting rid of it.
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