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Hacking GMail 02

If you’re not using Internet Explorer—and for the sake of this book, at least, I recommend you do not, and employ Firefox (as I am in this chapter’s screenshots) or Mozilla instead—this is a drawback to the keyboard shortcuts. Grasp your mouse, and click the Send button instead.
Chapter 3 — Gmail Power Tips 17 If you’re not using Internet Explorer — and for the sake of this book, at least, I rec- ommend you do not, and employ Firefox (as I am in this chapter’s screenshots) or Mozilla instead — this is a drawback to the keyboard shortcuts. Grasp your mouse, and click the Send button instead. The keyboard shortcuts come into their own when dealing with spam. Figure 3-4 shows my Inbox full of the stuff. FIGURE 3-4: An Inbox full of spam (I have to be honest here — Gmail’s spam filters caught all of this before it hit my Inbox. I just moved it out there for the sake of this demonstration.) If you wake to find an Inbox full of such nastiness, it’s easy to get rid of. Press o to open a message, and when it has opened, press the exclamation point (!) to mark it as spam. By using my left hand to press the Shift+1 to make the exclamation point, and my right hand to press o, I find I can get quite a satisfying rhythm going and my Inbox clear in little to no time. Making “Pow!” noises is also recommended. You can, of course, use the mouse to select the ones you want and then hit an exclamation point. 18 Part I — Starting to Use Gmail The keyboard shortcuts are many and various, and are all good to know about. But they’re also very simple. By now you should have the hang of their power. Here then, before moving on, in Table 3-1 is a complete rundown of the keyboard shortcuts available at the time of this writing. Table 3-1 Gmail’s Keyboard Shortcuts Key Definition Action c Compose Allows you to compose a new message. Shift+c allows you to compose a message in a new window. / Search Puts your cursor in the search box. k Move to newer conversation Opens or moves your cursor to a more recent conversation. You can hit Enter to expand a conversation. j Move to older conversation Opens or moves your cursor to the next oldest conversation. You can hit Enter to expand a conversation. n Next message Moves your cursor to the next message. You can hit Enter to expand or collapse a message. (Applicable only in Conversation View.) p Previous message Moves your cursor to the previous message. You can hit Enter to expand or collapse a message. (Applicable only in Conversation View.) Enter Open Opens your conversation. Also expands or collapses a message if you are in Conversation View. u Return to conversation list Refreshes your page and returns you to the Inbox, or list of conversations. y Archive (Remove from current view) Automatically removes the message or conversation from your current view. From Inbox, y means Archive. From Starred, y means Unstar. From Spam, y means Unmark as spam and move to Inbox. From Trash, y means move to Inbox. From any label, y means Remove the label. Pressing y has no effect if you’re in Sent or All Mail. Chapter 3 — Gmail Power Tips 19 Key Definition Action x Select conversation Automatically checks and selects a conversation so you can archive, apply a label, or choose an action from the drop-down menu to apply to that conversation. s Star a message or conversation Adds a star to or removes a star from a message or conversation. Stars allow you to give a message or conversation a special status. ! Report spam Marks a message as spam and removes it from your conversation list. r Reply Reply to the message sender. Shift+r allows you to reply to a message in a new window. (Applicable only in Conversation View.) a Reply all Reply to all message recipients. Shift+a allows you to reply to all message recipients in a new window. (Applicable only in Conversation View.) f Forward Forward a message. Shift+f allows you to forward a message in a new window. (Applicable only in Conversation View.) esc Escape from input field Removes the cursor from your current input field. Now that you’re familiar with Gmail’s keyboard shortcuts, Table 3-2 outlines the combo-key shortcuts. Table 3-2 Combo-Keys Shortcuts Shortcut Key Definition Action Tab then Enter Send message After composing your message, use this combination to automatically send it. (Supported in Internet Explorer only.) y then o Archive and next Archive your conversation and move to the next one. g then a Go to All Mail Takes you to All Mail, the storage place for all the mail you’ve ever sent or received, but haven’t deleted. g then s Go to Starred Takes you to all of the conversations that you’ve starred. g then c Go to Contacts Takes you to your Contacts list. g then d Go to Drafts Takes you to all the drafts that you’ve saved. g then i Go to Inbox Takes you back to the Inbox. 20 Part I — Starting to Use Gmail Moving on from the keyboard shortcuts, the next section shows you how you can avoid them altogether by using filters. Plus Addressing and Filtering One little-known feature of the more old school e-mail systems is the one called plus addressing. It can be exceptionally useful both in Gmail and in your other e-mail systems, and I use it extensively for things such as mailing lists and weblog commenting. In a nutshell, Gmail ignores anything in the first half of an e-mail address after a plus sign. So [email protected] is treated in exactly the same way as [email protected]. It is not, as you might expect, a different address. You can put anything after the plus sign except for a space or an at (@) sign, and it always gets delivered to your real Inbox. Figure 3-5 should prove that it works. FIGURE 3-5: Plus addressing in action Plus addressing is remarkably useful, as it enables you to set up filters for your incoming mail. In order to do set up filters, click the “Create a filter” link to the right of the search bar. You will be presented with a screen containing something very much like Figure 3-6. Chapter 3 — Gmail Power Tips 21 FIGURE 3-6: The first stage in setting up a filter Copy, as shown, the address into the To: box, and click the Next Step button. Of course, this is how you create filters for any other part of the message as well. I’ll leave it to the reader’s intelligence to see how this works. Figure 3-7 shows the next stage. FIGURE 3-7: Selecting the action you want Gmail to take when a message arrives A filter can move, star, directly archive, label, forward, trash, or a combination of the five, any message that triggers it. Select the actions you want, and click the Create Filter button. Figure 3-8 shows the final result. Because plus addressing effectively gives you an unlimited number of e-mail addresses to the same Gmail inbox, it allows you to assign one to each mailing list, website, and so on that you subscribe to. You can also use it to track which e-mail addresses have been sold to spammers, and send those to Trash automatically. Other Addressing Tips Gmail has a few other features to its addressing. First, the dot in the middle of most people’s Gmail addresses is entirely optional. As Figure 3-9 shows, [email protected] is exactly the same as [email protected]. 22 Part I — Starting to Use Gmail FIGURE 3-8: A filter, set up FIGURE 3-9: Receiving mail from anti-dot fanatic Indeed, as Figure 3-10 shows, the dot is basically ignored. Put it anywhere you like or leave it out entirely: yet another way to produce filterable e-mail addresses inside Gmail. Chapter 3 — Gmail Power Tips 23 FIGURE 3-10: The blessing of the wandering dot One final thing about addressing: If you are sending a mail to someone else’s Gmail account, you needn’t add the @gmail.com section of the address. Just type the first half and it is delivered perfectly well. Quickly Mark a Group of E-Mails Like most desktop applications, Gmail actually allows you to mark a group of items without having to select each one individually (by mark, I mean to put a check in the checkbox next to an e-mail when you are presented with a list of e-mails). With Gmail, if you’d like to select a group of consecutive messages with- out marking each one separately, you simply need to check the first one in the list, and then hold down the Shift key and check the last one you want to include in the group of marked messages — the two e-mails you checked and all of the e-mails between them will now be marked. You can use the same method to un- mark e-mails and to star or unstar them. Note, however, that this might not work in all browsers. Send Executables as Attachments When you receive an e-mail from an address that doesn’t end in @gmail.com, Gmail looks at attachments for file extensions known to be executable (such as .dll, .exe, .vbs, and so forth), so if someone sends you one of these file types, their message will bounce back. This goes for files within ZIP archives as well — Gmail looks inside these for executable extensions and the e-mail bounces back to the sender if it contains any. Gmail doesn’t look inside other archive formats, such as RAR or ACE, so you might want to use one of these formats instead of going through the hassle of the following workaround. To get around this annoyance, you can use the same trick that has been used for years. Simply tell the sender to rename the extension of the file to something Gmail will allow (such as .jpg), and when you receive the file, rename it back to the type it really is (for example, change file.jpg to file.exe). 24 Part I — Starting to Use Gmail It seems that Gmail will allow you to send and receive executable attachments between Gmail accounts and from Gmail to outside accounts. Advanced Searching Gmail is run by Google, so it’s obvious that its built-in search engine is going to be extremely powerful indeed. Everyone is used to the ordinary search technique of putting keywords into the box and pressing Enter, but not everyone is aware of the additional operators you can use. Table 3-3 gives a rundown. Table 3-3 Gmail’s Search Operators Operator Definition Example(s) from: Used to specify the sender. Example: from:amy Meaning: Messages from Amy. to: Used to specify a recipient. Example: to:david Meaning: All messages that were sent to David (by you or someone else). subject: Search for words in the Example: subject:dinner subject line. Meaning: Messages that have the word “dinner” in the subject. OR Search for messages matching Example: from:amy OR from:david term A or term B. Meaning: Messages from Amy or from OR must be in all caps. David. - Used to exclude messages Example: dinner-movie (hyphen) from your search. Meaning: Messages that contain the word “dinner” but do not contain the word “movie”. label: Search for messages by label. Example: from:amy label:friends There isn’t a search operator Meaning: Messages from Amy that have the for unlabeled messages. label “friends”. Example: from:david label:my-family Meaning: Messages from David that have the label My Family. has:attachment Search for messages with Example: from:david has:attachment an attachment. Meaning: Messages from David that have an attachment. Chapter 3 — Gmail Power Tips 25 Operator Definition Example(s) filename: Search for an attachment Example: filename:physicshomework.txt by name or type. Meaning: Messages with an attachment named physicshomework.txt. Example: label:work filename:pdf Meaning: Messages labeled work that also have a PDF file as an attachment. “ “(quotes) Used to search for an exact Example: “i’m feeling lucky” phrase. Meaning: Messages containing the phrase Capitalization isn’t taken into “i’m feeling lucky” or “I’m feeling lucky”. consideration. Example: subject:”dinner and a movie” Meaning: Messages containing the phrase “dinner and a movie” in the subject. () Used to group words. Example: from:amy(dinner OR movie) Used to specify terms that Meaning: Messages from Amy that contain shouldn’t be excluded. either the word “dinner” or the word “movie”. Example: subject:(dinner movie) Meaning: Messages in which the subject contains both the word “dinner” and the word “movie”. in:anywhere Search for messages Example: in:anywhere subject:movie anywhere in your account. Meaning: Messages in All Mail, Spam, and Messages in Spam and Trash Trash that contain the word “movie”. are excluded from searches by default. in:inbox Search for messages in Inbox, Example: in:trash from:amy in:trash Trash, or Spam. Meaning: Messages from Amy that are in in:spam the trash. is:starred Search for messages that are Example: is:read is:starred from:David is:unread starred, unread, or read. Meaning: Messages from David that have is:read been read and are marked with a star. cc: Used to specify recipients Example: cc:david bcc: in the cc: or bcc: fields. Meaning: Messages that were cc-ed to Search on bcc: cannot retrieve David. messages on which you were blind carbon copied. after: Search for messages after or Example: after:2004/04/17 before: before a certain date. before:2004/04/18 Date must be in yyyy/mm/dd Meaning: Messages sent on April 17, 2004. format. More precisely: Messages sent on or after April 17, 2004, but before April 18, 2004. 26 Part I — Starting to Use Gmail The operators detailed in Table 3-3 are all self-explanatory and can be combined. For example, consider the following search parameters: in:inbox from:BenHammersley “fancy a pint?” This search would result in any message from my Gmail account, in your Inbox, suggesting a visit to the pub. In order to bring any unread mail sent before New Year’s Eve 2004, with an attachment, and the subject line New Year’s Eve Invitation, you would conduct the following search: is:unread before:2004/12/31has:attachment subject:”New Years Eve Invitation” Very simple indeed. For more information on advanced searching with Google, a good place to start is Google For Dummies. And Now . . . You’ve reached the end of Chapter 3. You should feel confident using Gmail itself, in getting your mail into and out of the system, and in using the system with some sort of flair. From the next chapter onward, you’re going to delve into Gmail’s inner workings. Things get much more technical from now on. Let’s go.
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