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Filed under: Fun, E-mail

How to make your coworkers hate you

Annoying your coworkersIf you don't enjoy your current job or need to feel like a social outcast here are some great tips on how to make your coworkers hate you from ABC News. All you need is access to an email account. It's a powerful tool.
  1. Use urgent flags and big red letters for attention.
  2. Always cc a person's superior when you email them about work that needs to be done.
  3. Feel free to use the "reply all" button.
  4. Use ALL CAPS to get your point across.
Some additional tips just for you DLS readers:
  • Your boss works really hard. When you email him or her you should always include some smileys or other emoticons to let them know how you're feeling. It will brighten their day a little too. :-)
  • Evry1 nos how 2 txt so it is ok 2 use txt in email. It's faster and easier and everyone does it so, go right ahead.
  • People love chain letters so forward that one with the dancing puppies and mariachi music to the entire company. Everyone will love it.
  • Create a cute email signature with dancing gifs, pictures of your kids or a quote about how much you love to shop. It will really personalize your work communications.
Remember, even though it's only email, it reflects you. Make sure you use email properly just like any other business tool.

Filed under: Windows, Macintosh, Linux, E-mail, Productivity, Google, Freeware, How-Tos

How to organize your ideas in Gmail - Emailers Anonymous

Gmail Inbox remixedA friend recently asked me how he could set his Gmail up so that he could email himself ideas, and have them be automatically filed away into a specific label instead of clogging up his inbox. Gmail has a function called Filters which is similar to rules in other email systems, and it is very powerful and well-suited to this task. If you would like to be able to email yourself information and have it automatically be stored away into a label and stay out of your inbox, follow these instructions.

So the first thing to keep in mind is that there are reasons where you might legitimately want to email yourself and have it show up in your inbox, for example you might Reply All to something and find that your email address was included as an addressee. You don't want a thread like that one getting automatically moved into a folder, or you might miss it.

So the solution is to use a custom email address, which is easy. Gmail supports an email standard that allows you to add a plus symbol after your username, and anything you like after that. So an email sent to username+ideas@gmail.com will go right into your Gmail account the same way one sent to username@gmail.com will.

But here's the cool thing: you can filter based on the actual incoming email address. Here's how:

Read more →

Filed under: Windows, Macintosh, Linux, E-mail, Productivity, Google, Freeware, How-Tos, iPhone

Using Gmail's Starred items to track expected replies - Emailers Anonymous

Gmail Starred ItemsOne of the hardest aspects of managing email is keeping track of sent messages where a reply is expected. Do you have this problem? I know I do. Some of the people I correspond with are completely reliable, and I know that if I send them something, I will get a reply within 24 hours and often sooner. But some of my other regular correspondents are not so reliable.

At all.

It's really frustrating.

Luckily, if you're a Gmail user, there is a very simply method for keeping track of messages where you are expecting a reply. You see it every day, and you might even be using it for something else.

What am I talking about?

The Starred attribute. With a single key or button press, Gmail allows you to add a star to a message which prominently appears whenever that message or thread is in view.

This process is incredibly simple, but effective. Now, I should first point out that starring an email is for all intents and purposes the same as labeling a message with any arbitrary label. But I think stars work better as an expected response reminder than a label would. So follow along with me and see if you don't come to the same conclusion.

Read more →

Filed under: Business, Features, E-mail, Office, How-Tos

Inbox 0.5 - How to get to an empty inbox - Emailers Anonymous

Internet Email
For the sake of this article, we're going to assume that you understand the benefits of being a filer rather than a piler. If you'd like to get to an empty inbox, but are facing what seems to be an insurmountable pile, take heart; we've all been there. Even for people that are meticulous filers, there are times, such as returning from a trip, where the amount of email facing you seems impossible.

Sometimes when we get overly focused on the end goal we make our task seem impossible, and it doesn't need to be. There's a simple formula you can follow that will help you meet your goal of an empty inbox. If you decide to follow it, your inbox won't be empty today, or even tomorrow, but in a matter of days, most likely less than a week, it will.

It's called Inbox 0.5. The idea is to ensure that you get through at least half of the emails you are facing. Here's how it works:

It's day one, and you're looking at 700 emails staring you in the face first thing in the morning. It's your task to get down to 350 by the end of the day. It sounds hard, but here's the thing. Most of that email is bulk mail subscriptions and the like, or simply out of date. If you can group or sort based on email subject or thread, do so - it will help you dispose of a huge number of emails once you've caught up to date with the most recent one.

It seems like a lot (and it is), but you'll probably find that getting through the first 350 messages is the easiest batch you will face.

Read more →

Filed under: Internet, Features, Windows, Macintosh, Linux, Windows Mobile, E-mail, Office, Web services, Apple, Google, Microsoft, BlackBerry, iPhone

The Joy and Sorrow of IMAP - Emailers Anonymous

Checking Email in ZurichHave you got an iPhone and a Gmail account? If so, you're probably using IMAP, and you may not even realize it. What's IMAP? It's an email protocol that has been around for many years, but is not nearly as well known as its counterpart, POP.

First, the definitions:

POP, or POP3: Post Office Protocol 3, the most commonly used email protocol for retrieving remote email to a local client over a TCP/IP connection.

IMAP, or IMAP4: Internet Message Access Protocol, an email protocol for accessing email on a remote server using a local client over a TCP/IP connection.

While the two definitions seem very similar, take note of the difference. POP is used for retrieving email to the local client, whereas IMAP is used to access email located on a remote server.

When you use POP, your email comes in to you local client, and typically the remote version is purged. There is no concept of multiple clients having identical synchronized versions of your inbox and email folders.

When you use IMAP, your email actually lives on a remote server, and is not purged. You can access it with a local client, which downloads a copy of your messages, and synchronizes the contents of your local mail store to that of the server's. Changes that you make locally are reflected on the server, and if you wanted to you could connect with another device or email client that is capable of IMAP, and you will see exactly the same thing - all of your messages in your inbox and other folders will reflect exactly what is on the server.

Sounds pretty great, right? Well, yes. Most of us probably have some hardcore geek friend that has been extolling the virtues of IMAP for years, only to have it fall on deaf ears. Most of us have either never had the need for such synchronization, or have not had an IMAP capable mail provider.

Read more →

Filed under: Features, E-mail, Office

Attention fragmentation and computing health risks - Emailers Anonymous

Computing fatiguePreviously in this series we discussed the user interface advancement of collapsing emails in the same thread together, and how that can help to deal with a high volume of incoming email. It's worth asking whether this is really a solution unto itself, or if it is maybe just a way to cope with a bigger problem, that of attention fragmentation.

Have you ever found yourself having multiple conversations with the same person (or group of people) at the same time? Most often this will happen in email; you find yourself quickly writing a reply to one thread, and as you send your reply you notice a new update to a different thread from the same correspondent. It also sometimes happens in instant messaging programs, or even social networking sites - and often all of these at the same time. Is this truly more efficient than speaking to people either face-to-face or over the phone? Is it even healthy?

The topic of email as it relates to health is top-of-mind this week, due to a very in-depth article published at the Huffington Post by Linda Stone, titled Just Breathe: Building the Case for Email Apnea, which was highlighted by Robert Scoble. Linda Stone, if you're not familiar with her name, has been an executive at both Apple and Microsoft, and was the person that coined the term "continuous partial attention". Continuous partial attention refers to the way in which we attempt to multi-task, but really end up only giving a fraction of our attention to any one task, project, or conversation. Linda argues that we end up accomplishing less, damaging relationships, and generally accomplishing the opposite of what we intended when we practice continuous partial attention.

Read more →

Filed under: Business, Features, Windows, Macintosh, Linux, E-mail, Office, Productivity, Apple, Google, Microsoft, Commercial, Shareware, Freeware

Piling vs. Filing - Emailers Anonymous

Email me
Is your email inbox overflowing with thousands of messages, or is it virtually empty, with only the few messages that have come in since the last time you checked it? It seems like a simple personal preference, but the answer to the question of whether you are an email "filer" or "piler" says a lot more about you than you might think it does.

While nobody can see into your inbox, the fact is that if you simply leave everything there and let it get pushed down by new messages that are coming in, you're almost certainly not giving enough thought to the things that hit your inbox. For pilers, the only clue as to whether an email has been dealt with is whether it is marked as read or unread. But all too often we read emails when we are not currently in a position to do anything about them. Even if we're careful about going back and marking messages as unread, they still get pushed down, out of sight, out of mind.

Right now, many of you with overflowing inboxes are probably screaming at your screen. How can we be so bold as to assume that we know if you're on top of your email or not based on this simple criteria? And plus, just last week we were writing about the virtues of Gmail. Gmail! You know, the email client made by that internet search juggernaut, Google! Surely if you need to find an email, it's only a search away. So why bother filing things at all?

Okay, we hear you, and understand your position. But there's really no gentle way to say this, so we're just going to come out and say it.

You're wrong.

Okay, there, we've said it. Everyone take a deep breath! Now let's look at how we can take such a controversial position in complete and utter knowledge that we are right, with not even the remotest possibility that we could be wrong. Alright then.

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Filed under: Business, Features, Windows, Macintosh, Linux, E-mail, Office, Productivity, Web services, Apple, Google, Microsoft, Commercial, Freeware

Email user interface advancement - Emailers Anonymous

Gmail mailboxThis post's subtitle could be "Why Gmail rocks". If you're already a Gmail user, you probably already understand Gmail's unique way of grouping messages from the same conversation together and presenting them in one unified view. If that's the case, this article is probably not of much interest to you. But if you've never tried Gmail, and have never understood why your friends keep saying it's the best thing since sliced bread, hopefully we can help you out (and provide some alternatives if Gmail is not an option for you).

Grouping threads

Virtually all email clients have a view that presents a list of messages. The traditional way to handle this (and the way virtually all email clients and webmail interfaces do it) is to treat each individual message separately. The onus is on the user to keep various conversations (threads, in email parlance) straight in their head. This works fine when you receive only 20 or 30 emails in a day, but when you get up above 60 or 70, this model starts to fall apart. It completely fails when you get up into hundreds of messages per day or more.

The unique feature that Gmail brings to the table is the ability to intelligently group messages from a common email thread together, so that in your list of messages you will only see one entry per thread. Right off the bat this will take an inbox with 70 actual messages in it, and make it appear as if there are only 20 or 30, since you're only seeing one row per thread.

Read more →

Filed under: Business, Features, E-mail, Office, Productivity

Email Etiquette - Emailers Anonymous

Emailers Anonymous
Today we'd like to introduce the first in a new weekly series of posts at Download Squad called Emailers Anonymous, a series for anyone that is addicted to email as part of their daily life. We're going to explore email from all angles - everything from email clients to email etiquette, email productivity to email formatting. And anything else you have questions about.

Today's post will focus on email etiquette, and how to be a good email neighbor.


It's easy to feel frustrated with friends and co-workers when they make basic email mistakes like sending messages with no subject text, or referencing an attachment but not actually including one. But are we completely innocent of making email offenses ourselves? Have a look at the ones listed below; maybe you could be a better email neighbor.

Links without context

This is maybe one of the most common, and most egregious faux pas that can be committed online. It happens on instant messaging programs and frighteningly often on Twitter, but it also happens very often in email. Think about the last time you came across a website you really wanted a friend to see. When you emailed it to them, did you give any descriptive text so that they had a clue as to what they were about to see when clicking on your link, or did you simply give the a link and expect them to blindly follow it? This is tantamount to saying "close your eyes and open your mouth" - no thanks! If you really want people to follow your links, take a moment to explain what they are about to see - a sentence or two is enough.

Read more →

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The World's Hardest Game 2.0 - Time Waster

So, just how good at time waster games are you? Think you've got the stuff? Well, The World's Hardest Game 2.0 doesn't think you do. Yes, amazingly, it's possible to have a sequel to a game called "The World's Hardest Game". It doesn't seem logically possible, since if the first one was actually the world's hardest, how could another one come along and share the moniker? It made me doubt the name in the first place. That is, until I tried the game. The mechanics of the game are very simple. You are a small red square, ...

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