I discovered what is, for me, a useful way of managing large volumes of email in Gmail under MacOS.
In Mac mail I set up a number of smart mailboxes - called "Begins with A", "Begins with B" etc. right through to "Begins with Z"
If one of these is accessed and then the mailbox is ordered by From, it is quite likely that many emails will be found adjacent in the listing coming from single sources, such as an online shopping site, or a news site etc . These can then be rapidly scanned and selected - in case there are any that might be worth keeping - and then all the selected ones tossed into the Trash/Bin. Then the Trash/Bin has to be accessed - again select all of the newly moved items (since they've probably not been really deleted yet ...) and delete them again.
This process appears to work, as after a few days my Gmail account has reduced by over a Gigabyte.
Others have said - "Why not just list alphabetically, and delete from there?"
Reason - chances are that by that approach the only emails which will be deleted will be the ones beginning with "A". Few people are going to have the patience to work through an inbox sorted alphabetically and work through from A to Z.
The way to use the system here is to choose choose a letter at random on any one day, and look at that email only. That should be manageable, and it's typically possible to delete several hundred emails in a very short while by this method. The largest number I've done in one swoop was a few days ago - over 1400. Sometimes these individual emails are themseslves quite small, but taken altogether they may use up a lot of storage. The feeling of satisfaction at discovering whole chunks of email one may not even have known about and removing them may also spur one on to do more than one letter mailbox in a session. Sometimes also one does discover other email which should be kept, but mostly this method enables quick and fairly safe removal of very large amounds of email which is really not needed - probably never was either - such as news bulletins.
This is more likely for subscribers to online newspapers, which one may be happy to have, but as with physical newspapers, the online sites often send out supplements, other sections etc. and any one individual is unlikely to want all of them. For example, I now subscribe to the NY Times and the Washington Post, and there are many articles I want to read, but also many that I don't, or don't have time to read. In any case, as a subscriber, if I delete one from my email and I really need/want it, I should be able to get it back from the origin site by logging in. I can work on the assumption that anything that's more than (say) a month old and not around a significant event can be deleted.
Most of the commercial/advertising material (yes - you did buy a pair of shoes from a site 5 years ago ...and now you discover you have more than 200 copies of emails with pictures of shoes in .... !!) can be deleted and never accessed again - and not even opened.
In Mac mail I set up a number of smart mailboxes - called "Begins with A", "Begins with B" etc. right through to "Begins with Z"
If one of these is accessed and then the mailbox is ordered by From, it is quite likely that many emails will be found adjacent in the listing coming from single sources, such as an online shopping site, or a news site etc . These can then be rapidly scanned and selected - in case there are any that might be worth keeping - and then all the selected ones tossed into the Trash/Bin. Then the Trash/Bin has to be accessed - again select all of the newly moved items (since they've probably not been really deleted yet ...) and delete them again.
This process appears to work, as after a few days my Gmail account has reduced by over a Gigabyte.
Others have said - "Why not just list alphabetically, and delete from there?"
Reason - chances are that by that approach the only emails which will be deleted will be the ones beginning with "A". Few people are going to have the patience to work through an inbox sorted alphabetically and work through from A to Z.
The way to use the system here is to choose choose a letter at random on any one day, and look at that email only. That should be manageable, and it's typically possible to delete several hundred emails in a very short while by this method. The largest number I've done in one swoop was a few days ago - over 1400. Sometimes these individual emails are themseslves quite small, but taken altogether they may use up a lot of storage. The feeling of satisfaction at discovering whole chunks of email one may not even have known about and removing them may also spur one on to do more than one letter mailbox in a session. Sometimes also one does discover other email which should be kept, but mostly this method enables quick and fairly safe removal of very large amounds of email which is really not needed - probably never was either - such as news bulletins.
This is more likely for subscribers to online newspapers, which one may be happy to have, but as with physical newspapers, the online sites often send out supplements, other sections etc. and any one individual is unlikely to want all of them. For example, I now subscribe to the NY Times and the Washington Post, and there are many articles I want to read, but also many that I don't, or don't have time to read. In any case, as a subscriber, if I delete one from my email and I really need/want it, I should be able to get it back from the origin site by logging in. I can work on the assumption that anything that's more than (say) a month old and not around a significant event can be deleted.
Most of the commercial/advertising material (yes - you did buy a pair of shoes from a site 5 years ago ...and now you discover you have more than 200 copies of emails with pictures of shoes in .... !!) can be deleted and never accessed again - and not even opened.
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