tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8318734518772387227.post4539886626665750114..comments2024-03-29T01:46:51.442-04:00Comments on Lisa Nielsen: The Innovative Educator: Inbox Zero or Inbox Infinity? Which Type Are You?Lisa Nielsenhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07759123507185453030noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8318734518772387227.post-42331993140209344282019-02-10T21:19:03.147-05:002019-02-10T21:19:03.147-05:00Lisa, interesting perspective. I am very much of t...Lisa, interesting perspective. I am very much of the empty inbox camp. It makes it super simple to see when I am "done" with email. <br /><br />The "Priority Inbox" view separated the wheat from the chaff. I frequently look at the "Everything Else" section, click the first, click the last one while holding , and delete 50 messages with one click. <br /><br />For the emails that are going to take some time, I forward them to my digital task list with an amended subject line that describes exactly what needs to be done and the date I want to handle it. No searching needed for following up. The decision about followup happens on the front end. <br /><br />I programmed the "\" key to delete, giving me a better keyboard shortcut than the default and always use the "e" to archive instead of using the mouse. I fly through email and I know exactly when I am done...when it's empty, and it's empty every day. Dr. Frank Buckhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10215499400544458341noreply@blogger.com