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<p dir="auto">Fredrik Jonsson wrote (at 23:45 on 20 Apr 2016):</p>
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<p dir="auto">Howard Wettstein 2016-04-21 15:33 wrote:</p>
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<p dir="auto">Smart folders seem very useful, but I don’t know what I’m doing. I have a pretty elaborate folder structure that was imported from a university gmail account that I was using through Apple Mail.</p>
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<p dir="auto">Smart folders are saved searches and they are really smart and really fast. I file away everything in "Archive" and use smart folders to bring order.</p>
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<p dir="auto">Fredrik, since you have an existing folder structure, I'm sure you don't want to get rid of it. Preserving your current structure will let you continue to find your messages easily when you're not using MailMate to access your mail (for example, when you're using webmail).</p>
<p dir="auto">I'm in the same boat, and I have a number of smart folders set up. One very useful one should be in your Examples folder in MailMate: <strong>Mailing Lists.</strong> It continually searches all your messages for any that use the obscure <em>List-Id</em> email header, which indicates that the message was sent to a mailing list. It also displays subfolders for each individual value of <em>List-Id</em> found. This gives you an instant view of the mailing lists to which you're subscribed (only excepting lists from which you've already deleted every message). Some of the subfolders may be named with a weird code instead of a readable list name, but you can easily rename the subfolder.</p>
<p dir="auto">I also have smart folders set up to match messages that were sent to email addresses that I no longer actively use. When a new message is sent to one of those addresses, a new-message counter appears next to the corresponding smart folder. That way I know to notify the sender that they're using an old email address. (Of course, this only works if the old address is still functional.)</p>
<p dir="auto">MailMate is amazingly powerful and customizable to your workflow, but I can testify that it can take a while to understand how it "thinks." Dive in, keep the online docs handy, and stay subscribed to this list. You'll figure it out!</p>
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