Microsoft experimenting with a pause button for incoming e-mail
Microsoft Office Labs has launched a new product called E-mail Prioritizer that will not only sort through your in-box to figure out what's important, but also give you an honest-to-goodness pause button in case you want to escape an Exchange server e-mail avalanche.
Users must be running the latest version of Outlook (2007), and for now the tool is PC-only. After installing it, you'll get a new toolbar menu option that lets you toggle on the "do not disturb" mode for a certain period of time or based on your meeting schedule. Once you return, or the timer runs out, it'll sync back up and grab new messages.
Unfortunately this is a client-side stop-gap on the way to having such an option on the Exchange server itself. Sure your server admin can put a pause on your account, but you can't. This option simply turns off Outlook's software-based e-mail antenna, so messages will still dutifully arrive on your mobile phone if you've got it set up to receive push mail.

To toggle the 'away' mode you can just use the drop down menu. This menu also lets you sort through prioritized e-mails.
(Credit: CNET Networks)The far more interesting half of this tool is the prioritizer itself. This will rate messages in your in box from zero to three stars. The ratings come from a system used by many folks, including several Microsoft employees I talked to back in March. For instance, e-mails sent to you and nobody else, or those from your bosses gets three stars, whereas mail you're carbon-copied on, or where you're part of a large list, scores far lower.
In my case, my in-box had about 450 messages on it, and it was prioritized in about a minute's time. To make use of it, you must learn from and train Microsoft's system, which could become second nature after a week or two of honing your in-box skills.

Microsoft's priority system is not easy to understand at first, but based on a system of rules you can simply go in and edit.
(Credit: CNET Networks)
Josh Lowensohn is an associate editor for Webware.com, CNET's blog about cool and otherwise useful Web applications and services. If you've found a site you'd like profiled, shoot him an e-mail. E-mail Josh.



Say an important email from your boss comes in that needs dealing with right away, you dont get it for another 2 hours, perhaps you already went home by then.
Asking for trouble.
Setting up rules to filter mail into folders is already a much better solution - you can see you have 57 customer emails to deal with later & you dont miss out the important things.
We need to be motivated to pinpoint the precise people that benefit from our communications, and not lazily scattershot a load of tenuous stakeholders. I need to be forced to go to my boss to explain why I spent all my credits.
e-mail distraction is a real serious problem and this might be a good solution. Also detailed proritisation seems like godsent for people with overflowing mailboxes.
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by haggie2
August 21, 2008 3:51 PM PDT
- Huh? I thought there was a "pause" button built into all my Microsoft applications. If there isn't, why do they run so slow?
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