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New Gmail Labs Feature Saves You Precious Seconds

  • Post author: Omid Farhang
  • Post published: October 29, 2010
  • Reading Time: 1 min
  • Word Count: 161 words

Gmail has just added a new ā€œLabsā€ feature that should save you some time if youā€™re the type of person that tends to plow through your e-mail inbox in bunches. As the name implies, the new ā€œAuto-advanceā€ option (that can be enabled under ā€œSettingsā€ > ā€œLabsā€) lets you automatically move to the previous or next conversation after archiving, deleting or muting an individual e-mail message. While that might sound like expected behavior, up until today, Gmail simply took you back to your inbox after taking any of those actions, meaning you essentially needed to scroll back down to wherever you were in your attempt at e-mail triage. ...

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Gmail Auto-unsubscribe Search

  • Post author: Omid Farhang
  • Post published: October 16, 2010
  • Reading Time: 1 min
  • Word Count: 139 words

Gmail has a feature that lets you unsubscribe from a newsletter or a mailing list when you report one of the messages as spam. ā€œYouā€™ll see the unsubscribe tool when you mark a message from particular types of mailing lists as spam. If the particular message is a misuse of a mailing list you like to receive, you can Report spam as usual. But if you never want to receive another message or newsletter from that list again, click Unsubscribe instead. Weā€™ll send a request to the sender that your email address be removed from the list.ā€ ...

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Conquer Your Gmail Inbox With Nested Labels

  • Post author: Omid Farhang
  • Post published: April 9, 2010
  • Reading Time: 2 min
  • Word Count: 245 words

Heavy Gmail label users will appreciate the latest experimental feature, available in Gmail Labs: Nested Labels, which let you organize your inbox into as many categories and subcategories as you like. To enable it, open Settings ā€“ Gmail Labs, and enable the ā€œNested Labelsā€ option. Now, if you want to create a child label ā€“ or a subfolder, if you will ā€“ you must name it with slashes (/). For example, you can create a label named ā€œFriendsā€. A nested label for that label could be named ā€œFriends/Workplaceā€. It would be nice to manipulate nested labels via drag and drop, but for now this naming scheme is the only way to do it. ...

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