1. Merlin has a suggestion about inboxes and default views:

    Assuming I want to see unprocessed messages every time I do _anything_ with email is like making me trudge out to my home mailbox every time I take a leak, turn on the oven, fold a towel, or do any of the 500,000 other things I can easily accomplish without asking for new information.

    Every mail client ever misses Merlin’s point. There’s more than one thing that we do with email, and every time we do one of them, we have to pay the distraction tax of seeing our inbox. The way to fix this is to completely separate processing new things from the other tasks - composing new mail, referring to temporarily useful mail, and searching for old mail.

    I like Merlin’s approach of having a separate “app” for each view onto his mail. I do wonder if this kind of thing would catch on. This feels like an extension of something I wrote a while ago, the webmail-only browser, where the idea is to identify a single task that you need to wall off from distraction, and make a separate app just for that.

     
    1. zaiga reblogged this from soupsoup
    2. hammersley reblogged this from merlin
    3. ianbroyles said: I use filters in Gmail to automatically apply labels to incoming emails. These labels show up as boxes in my mail app and I setup the mail app to push mail to my important labels so they are always up to date. More: tinyurl.com/formerl…
    4. grantimatter said: Actually, Yahoo has recently ticked me off by sort of doing this - instead of going straight to the inbox it goes to a “Home” that consists of all the folders down the left, a couple “new from contacts” in the middle and… news stories on the rest.
    5. mikechecksmail reblogged this from merlin and added:
      suggestion about inboxes and default views:...Every mail client ever misses Merlin’s...
    6. nedhepburn said: tell Sandwich hello for me.
    7. penllawen said: Merlin, you have one of the most aggressively customised iPhone homescreen layouts I’ve seen. I’d love to see a post where you lay out how you use these apps and what some of them are (+Cal, for example?)
    8. soupsoup reblogged this from merlin and added:
      Simplification by complication.