Tinymce jotspot4/5/2023 ![]() ![]() Just integrate Gmail Macros’ very useful shortcuts, as mentioned above. Why is everyone so obsessed with adding drag-and-drop support to everything? Google Reader got it and I haven’t touched the feature after the first five minutes or so when I was playing with it. ![]() Leave it as-is and keep the full window for the email. I much prefer specifically opening messages, not just selecting them and having them open in half a window. There doesn’t have to be a metaphor change in the interface and documentation for that. If you don’t like labels, just use them like folders, one label to each conversation. * Put back features from the old contact manager, like the custom field labelsĪlso, a few things I would *not* like to see show up in Gmail: * Labeling or starring emails that are in the Drafts folder and having those labels/stars stick around after the messages are sent * Return receipt support, incoming and outgoing They’re so incredibly convenient, you don’t know what you’re missing! * Integrate Gmail Macros-like functionality, preferably cloning Brent Nef’s (currently broken due to the code change) version. I’ve been reminded of a couple other features I forgot about: Part of me wonders whether someone has already created something like this for Gmail.Īnd part of me wonders: what feature would you like to see in Gmail? Now that Gmail has free POP, IMAP, and an iPhone version, what do you want to see next from Gmail? ![]() Part of me wonders whether the Greasemonkey API for Gmail could do something like this, maybe by storing the date to send an email as some sort of special tag. If I know that I’m going to need to collect data from someone at the end of the week or quarter, why can’t I write the email now and set it to ping them when the time is up? If someone says “this bug will be fixed in three weeks,” it would be great to write a “Hey, how’s that bug going?” email and set it to tickle or ping them in three weeks. If someone emails me a non-critical email, sometimes it would be nice to write a reply immediately, but set the email to wait for a few hours before heading to the other person. Before you know it, you’ve traded several emails that you didn’t need to. Then the other person writes back quickly. And if I can deal with an email in a minute or two, I often do. If you’re like me, you treat your inbox as a to-do list. Have you ever hit send on an email at the exact same time that you noticed a typo? Or did you ever get “emailer’s regret” because you sent a snarky or angry email instead of polite one? The “oops” filter would let you delay sending email for a short while (two minutes if you suffer from typo-itis, longer if you tend to flame in emails) until you’re sure you want to send that email. As a computer science person, here’s how I’d turn that one feature into three features: But I’ve been thinking about a feature that I really want in Gmail: I want the ability to delay sending replies/emails until a certain time or date. I really like Gmail because it makes email much less annoying. ![]()
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