queensushi
queensushi
queensushi

This.. exactly. Snooze is very useful for people who work with multiple clients or in an office. I’ve never heard of anyone using it to zero out their inbox.

I find Snooze useful for removing an email until it is needed. For instance if I buy tickets to an event online I can snooze the confirmation email until the time or even the place of the event. That way they aren’t cluttering my inbox until needed.

Snooze works just fine for me.

Oh, thank God that David Nield is here to tell us what is and isn’t a good idea! No longer should you make your own decisions based on you personal needs, but listen to this guy who probably gets paid $10 an article.

With all due respect, you’re completely off your gourd here. Snoozing’s incredibly useful. People don’t respond to e-mails when they should, so you snooze an e-mail for three days — when it pops up again, if it’s not been responded to, you know to check in with that person again. Or if you know that an activity is

David I have to highly disagree; as a CEO Snoozing has saved me sanity and anxiety as well as helped me better schedule my days to come. All these other suggestions you mention - what a mess! That’s why I never utilized anything except the categories, which in my opinion Inbox has a much cleaner interface. I’ve

If I may, I think there is a better use for the Snooze option than just telling an email to come back tomorrow.

You assume that NOW is always the best time to deal with something. Sometimes it isn’t and it’s nice to get irrelevant things out of the way so that you can focus on what DOES need to be dealt with now. Further, you get the added bonus of it “arriving” again at the proper time, complete with new notifications and a

If snooze works like I think (I didn’t try yet) is useful to me. I don’t like having email unread on my account so usually, I marked what is important for later but I easily forget to check it later. Now if I get something when I‘m at work just hit the snooze button to read it later at home.

Every Saturday I zero-out my Inbox; I respond to whatever needs responding to that I didn’t get to during the week, and archive or delete things that don’t require a response. I find the idea of snoozing emails that I don’t have time for during the week until Saturday a very attractive idea. It’s a minimal change to

Snooze is great if used right. I don’t use it to push things off, I use it to pop back in my inbox if I need to be reminded. If I replied to an important email that I need an answer by, I will snooze it for a day or week so it shows up again, and I can check to see if they responded or email them if they haven’t.

There is at least one case for snoozing email. When I buy tickets online for a concert a month or more in the future and the tickets are emailed to me. I snooze the email until a few days before the event, giving me plenty of time to print out the tickets. I don’t have to remember where I “saved” the tickets and I

Yep. BOYCOT AMAZON (but buy our Kinja Deals)

I think it’s mainly that, while both companies collect data in exchange for a service, Facebook has on multiple occasions shown a willfulness to use that data to suit their own needs at the expense of users. While Google has always made strides to protect user data.

How could they write an article about boycotting Amazon when they write roundups of the best deals on Amazon (and profit from those roundups) daily?

More or less this. I put up with the ads and the knowledge that my free email and the contents within is actually co-owned by me and Google. In exchange I get more pertinent ads served (they are sometimes useful) and I get a lot of free things, and can find things quickly.

Until it is shown Google compromised individual data to people guilty of treason, I am OK with Google summarizing individual data into demographics to sell ads.

We aren’t? The service is too valuable and most people are willing to make the trade off. The corporate witch hunt around here is a little much. Didn’t you guys write an article about boycotting or not using Amazon a month ago? Like people are not just going to stop using beloved products because a company is

So stop using Telegram start using Facebook and WhatsApp because its so secure and Zuckerberg is paying us. According to interviews with leading encryption and security experts. LOL

I love how you noted “There are many Telegram users who think they are communicating in an encrypted way, when they’re not because they don’t realize that they have to turn on an additional setting,” and then NEVER SAID WHAT THE SUPER-SECRET AND VITAL SETTING WAS.