661 – Finding mail and slimming down

661 – Finding mail and slimming down

No alt text provided for this image

Learning how to find stuff in email is crucial, since many of us get so much that we let it accumulate until eventually it becomes a problem. Sifting through the many cc’ed work mails, or finding the order confirmation email in your personal mailbox amongst all the other stuff, we’re more reliant on search than ever.

This is a topic that has been covered numerous times in previous ToWs –?573 – Searching in Outlook?and?504 – Searching Outlook?for example – but is worthy of a revisit since we may have a chance to pursue the fallacy that is?Inbox Zero?over the next few weeks. And maybe it’s a time to find and delete the special offer emails and once-in-a-lifetime invitations that may be clogging up our personal mailboxes too.

Work mail

Dealing with desktop Outlook on the PC, there are plenty of tools available to help you find specific messages, in fact there’s a whole toolbar full of them.

Search toolbar
Search commands

As you look to search mail that meets your chosen criteria – it’s from someone in particular, maybe with a keyword in the subject, or that you know has an attached PowerPoint file, you’ll see that clicking the filters and options inserts the actual commands that will drive?the search, into the Search bar positioned at the window’s top.

Outlook icons

Remembering a few of these means it’s quick and easy to search for mail from a person?(you don’t need the quotes, really, and you could use just a part of their name)?by typing straight into the box.?ALT+Q?(for query?)?sends your focus straight onto the search bar, so if you’re a?keyboard warrior, you could ALT+TAB to Outlook, ALT+Q and enter a search command, before your?mouse-toting colleagues have even clicked a toolbar. While we’re at it, remember that CTRL+number?jumps to the location on the?(now vertical)?icon bar on the left, so CTRL+1 will normally be mailbox, CTRL+2 is calendar, CTRL+3 contacts, and so on.

Commands could also be used to filter on properties of a message that are not so easily visible through the UI – eg?from:ewan messagesize:>10mb?or?from:nico sent:”last week”. See?here for more examples?of the kind of thing you can type. Look under Recent Searches to re-run ones you’ve typed before.

Reducing Mail Bloat

Mailbox size

Is your mailbox size is starting to look under strain?(look under the File menu to see how big your ‘box is and what the limit is)? With an active work mailbox in M365,?it shouldn’t?be much of a risk unless you genuinely never delete anything, but a quick way of identifying the big rocks and getting rid of them may be needed occasionally.

Search folder

You could run a one-off search for all big mail as per the instructions above, or for extra control try creating a?Search Folder. Expand the folder tree on Outlook’s left side, and scroll towards the bottom, to locate the?Search Folders?hierarchy, right-click on the top of the tree and choose?New …

Search criteria

This will bring up a wizard which creates a query across your entire mailbox or other data file, but which looks like a folder; it’s visible only in Outlook desktop?(ie not in web or on mobile)?but can be a great way to locate stuff that might be filed away in the darker recesses of your mailbox.

You can choose from some set templates or do your own custom thing entirely. The age of this feature is somewhat given away by the default value for “Large mail”… click the Choose button and enter something meaningful?(like 10000 for ~10MB).

Big mails

This should give you a few easily deleted big mails to at least get any short-term capacity problems dealt with.

Right-click on the Search folder and choose Customize… to give it a better name, or to tweak the criteria.

Home email

Outlook.com Storage

If you have a Hotmail / Outlook.com etc mailbox, there may be a more pressing size issue, as over a period of years you might have been signed up to a newsletter every time you buy something online, and without realizing it, those could account for gigabytes of data bloat on your mailbox. If every notification from Amazon or eBay is 400K, they soon mount up to a meaningful size.

If you have a free Outlook.com account, you should have a 15GB mailbox quota and if you have the account associated to a Microsoft 365 home or work subscription, you’ll get 50GB.

To check, go into Settings and search for Storage.

Sort and filter

The UI for Outlook.com is simple and effective, but one thing it doesn’t do a great job of is handling message sizes.

Group by size

Sort by size and you’ll see a group heading showing which emails are?the largest?(displayed by default with the biggest on top), but nowhere can you find out what the actual message size is.

If you want to do a mass clean-out of your Outlook.com account, then you could try sorting by?From, however the UI won’t let you click on the group heading to select all emails from that sender and make it easy to delete them.

The Windows Mail app on Win11 doesn’t offer Size either, not even to sort by.

Outlook desktop showing Outlook.com mailbox

Sometimes, the?old ways are the best?– you get much more functionality if you?add your Outlook.com account to full-fat desktop Outlook, allowing you to change the view, see and sort by message sizes etc. Oh, and yes, you can even set up a Search Folder too. Now,?tidy away!

This is the last “regular” Tip o’ the Week until January.

If you’re still here next Friday, look out for next week’s special edition –?it’ll be a belter.

Very handy! I'd add that it's worth looking for duplicate emails if you've ever done any .PST importing from another account. You can script this but it's very fiddly and there are tools available that do it effectively.

回复
Tony Bryant

Thinks Fashion - a member of the tribe..... also Global Partner Channel & Microsoft Alliance VP - K3 Fashion Solutions

2 年

This is a good one Ewan immensely helpful on a cold Friday morning ( well in UK)… ????

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Ewan Dalton的更多文章

  • #68: It’s all about the prompt

    #68: It’s all about the prompt

    When internet search engines took off in the mid 90s – remember Alta Vista? – and Google exploded into the public…

    6 条评论
  • #67: Are you sitting comfortably?

    #67: Are you sitting comfortably?

    Regular readers of ToW might have spotted the caption under the main image of last week’s missive: it was a photo of…

    3 条评论
  • #66: A computer on every desk?

    #66: A computer on every desk?

    “A computer on every desk, and in every home, running Microsoft software” – was an early and, at the time, unbelievably…

    7 条评论
  • #65: Enshittifcation 2025 pt 1 – progressing well

    #65: Enshittifcation 2025 pt 1 – progressing well

    The “word of the year” for 2023 was “Enshittification” – as defined by author Cory Doctorow: Here is how platforms die:…

    3 条评论
  • #64: Tick, Tock, Time is up (nearly) for Windows 10

    #64: Tick, Tock, Time is up (nearly) for Windows 10

    Microsoft developed a reputation for having a couple of shaky versions of anything before the one that you’d be…

    11 条评论
  • #63B: It’s Your ISP

    #63B: It’s Your ISP

    Following on from last week’s missive on finding problems in your home network, this one turns its attention to network…

  • #63: Trouble with your network?

    #63: Trouble with your network?

    We’ve all been there. Just when you need it to work, your home internet connection goes down or huffs off in go-slow…

    12 条评论
  • #62: Will the web become exclusively mobile?

    #62: Will the web become exclusively mobile?

    Looking back over the last 50 years of technology progress, the internet must surely be the most significant change…

    2 条评论
  • #61: Adios, Office!

    #61: Adios, Office!

    Microsoft is seemingly ditching it’s “Office” brand, which first appeared in 1990 to describe the now-familiar bundling…

    12 条评论
  • #60: The problem with coupons

    #60: The problem with coupons

    Lots of online shops have promo codes that can be entered as part of the checkout process, to get a discount, free…

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了