h a l f b a k e r yYou could have thought of that.
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So a draft that can be repetitively altered sightly and
sent. |
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this sounds like (already existing?) portions of collaboration software. |
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The issue is that I don't want to re-compose the email several times. I want all the text to be the same. Copy and paste is just too yesterday. Perhaps collaboration software can handle the task at hand but this is a fix for a simple email client. It seems like an easy enough task: You could end up with a matrix of the recipients on x and the attachments on y. Default is that either all receive or all don't receive. Just go through and check or uncheck the boxes. Would also be handy when I need to send the same text to several people, but only one person gets an attachment. |
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if you're willing to settle for a link instead of an attachment you could probably kludge something up like that (in Unix, anyways). |
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[+] I'll bun it but that only opens the door to more "I didn't get the attachment" excuses. |
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My invention has now been baked! So do I win a prize? Sneers? Snubbing? Swift kick to the head? |
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A grid of check boxes like you suggest sounds like it could be quite prone to misclicks. |
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Perhaps the idea should include a way to designate particular file extensions, and particular email recipients, as belonging to particular groups within the company. So for instance you could designate all .xls files as being "financial", which would mean that by default they would only get sent to recipients within the company's "financial" division. |
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This would allow your email client to come up with a useful set of defaults for the grid of checkboxes, which could then be tweaked as appropriate before clicking "Send". |
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The assignment of recipients to divisions could even be shared as part of the company-wide staff directory offered by clients such as Outlook. |
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