Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!watmath!clyde!cbatt!ihnp4!ih1ap!sja From: sja@ih1ap.UUCP (Steve Alesch) Newsgroups: net.sources.bugs Subject: Re: checkmail (a cute little mailchecking utility) Message-ID: <588@ih1ap.UUCP> Date: Thu, 2-Oct-86 13:06:25 EDT Article-I.D.: ih1ap.588 Posted: Thu Oct 2 13:06:25 1986 Date-Received: Sat, 4-Oct-86 08:43:01 EDT References: <561@sunybcs.UUCP> <996@hoptoad.uucp> Organization: AT&T Bell Labs, Naperville, IL Lines: 36 Summary: Why don't you just read your mail when you get. In article <996@hoptoad.uucp>, tim@hoptoad.UUCP writes: > It's been a while since I mentioned this trick I worked up a cuple of years > ago, so I thought I'd distribute it again: > > The problem is that most of us have mailboxes which have back mail in them, > so the login message "You have mail." tells us nothing. Scanning the > mailbox takes too long on login. What we really want to know is whether > mail arrived while we were logged out. > I assume that you either never read your mail or your read it but keep everything in $MAIL. If you never read your mail why not just set up a cron job to ``rm $MAIL'' once a day. :-) It's more likely that you started reading your mail originally, but after a few weeks of leaving everything in $MAIL, the pile of mail grew to an unmanageable size. The mail software (SVR2 mailx or Berkeley mail) allows you to save your mail under appropriately named categories, or delete it. Why not use them? When you read your mail from the good ole U.S Postal Service do you then put it back in your mailbox? Or do you throw it away (delete it), or categorize it and save it somewhere in your home paper file system? If I were to suggest a clever tool that allowed you to determine what new pieces of mail were put in your mailbox by the mailman today, what would you say to me? E-mail does require some discipline on your part. You have to read it about once a day, delete the junk or informational stuff and save the rest somewhere else. I don't think this is such a big price to pay considering the benefits it provides. After all, you've done the same thing with your mailbox in front of your home your whole life. -- Steve Alesch AT&T (312)510-7881, ...!ihnp4!ih1ap!sja