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Every now and then, I notice my email client say that it's downloading an email and then.. nothing.. the email just disappears.
I've got all sorts of mail filters/rules so quite likely it's been filed away in a more sensible place, but sometimes, against my better judgement, I want to just
know where that email it just downloaded went to.
I therefore propose a simple reverse chronological view of all received email be included with email clients, irrespective of which folder the email now resides in.
I'm guessing this is throughly baked in some clients, just not anything Microsoft does.
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I'm not sure, but you might want to give Google desktop a whirl - (if you're on a windows desktop) It can be set to index files and/or emails, allowing you to do an instant(ish) Google-style search for them - I believe it includes doing a time-stamped search. |
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or, in a similar vein, use gmail as your
client. The built in search is excellent. |
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Don't know if this helps for individuals, but I used Lotus Notes at my last formal workplace and there was an "all mail" view. Very helpful. |
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"the worlds second largest user of Lotus Notes" - Reuters? |
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could be Coca-Cola? [miasere] tell us? |
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You'd have thought that M$ Lookout should have some way of doing this! |
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It does have a neat way of looking for related messages (which, in my view, is quite well hidden) |
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Maybe this isn't what you're looking for, [neilp], but I think it is. In Outlook 2003 (SP-1), I just created a new item under "Search Folders". Told it I wanted to see unread mails. It picked up unread mail from multiple boxes. |
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thanks [half] I'd completely forgotten about those, why, that's exactly what I'd like. |
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Then you may have it. For you, no charge. |
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Search folders are super useful. There's lots of features in Outlook that no one ever takes the time to learn. |
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Of course, that's true of most powerful software; users tend to carve out little niches in the center of the user model and never stray far from there. |
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there's also loads of things it really should do but doesn't. Account specific autosignatures for instance. |
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You can have account specific autosignatures and more unless you are using an old version. |
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Different autosignatures for new vs. forward/reply, per account. |
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In 2003: Tools>Options>Mail Format |
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We use Lotus Notes at work for both email and a monstrous amount of half-assed databases. When the stupid hourglass pops up, all of my database applications are unaccessible. Thanks, Notes. |
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The only thing Notes has over Outlook (at least Outlook 2000) IMHO is the fact that they added address tab letters. |
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