Product Reviews
Yeah, I’ve Got Mail
Caelo’s Email Organizer creates order from chaos.
- By Roberta Bragg
- 03/01/2003
I’m not much for technological frippery. Just give me the basics and
I’m happy. If it hadn’t been for Object Linking and Embedding in the early
’90s, I’d have stuck with Unix and DOS. I’m not averse to new ideas, but
they have to rock my socks off for me to accept them into my daily life.
I’m a pretty straight-up Windows gal—no third-party products for me. So
it came as a surprise that I’d actually like Nelson Email Organizer (NEO).
This review isn’t my customary load-the-pristine-environment-and-let-‘er-rip.
This time, I took the forbidden path to Shangri-la; I loaded NEO on my
laptop and let it have a shot at the 7,000 stored messages and the daily
deluges of mail—junk and otherwise. Frankly, I thought a practical report
vs. a lab one might be more useful. Besides, how would I know if NEO’s
organizational style could be useful if I didn’t give it real-world data
to tackle?
This tool works with Outlook 97 and higher, but not Outlook Express.
It doesn’t change or modify Outlook’s management of your e-mail—it merely
serves as an indexing tool and reorganizes all of your correspondence.
The index, or catalog, is a database of pointers into your message store
and a complete word index of all of your messages. There are two benefits:
First, NEO can display references to your mail in more than one place,
providing views that fit the way you work. Second, searching for one message
out of 7,000 can be found in a couple of seconds.
NEO’s Hot View quickly became the place in which I worked. It organizes
mail into Active Mail (my undeleted mail from the last several weeks);
To Do (I refer the message here for follow-up); Recent Mail, including
Today, Yesterday, This Week and Last Week; and mail from those correspondents
I designate as Important. Having their names on this essential page allows
me to see that I have an unread message from any of them, providing a
great way to ensure they get quick attention. Nothing’s perfect, though.
The real mettle of a product is discovered when we have to turn to the
support desk for help. Unfortunately, the support desk is usually prepared
to deal with questions that anyone can find in the Help section of the
product. So when I approached NEO for help with some product hangs and
illegal memory-access messages, I expected the worst.
|
NEO places subscription lists and unfiltered spam
in the Bulk Mail view for easy organization. (Click image to view
larger version.) |
We corresponded for a while and I was thinking, “This must be what therapy’s
like.” I provided the details of what was happening through the “e-mail
support log,” which can insert NEO logs into my e-mail message. Yet someone
sorted it out by asking questions and providing responses that actually
fit the problems. The conversation continued as I relayed each crisis
and was asked to try something new. Like therapy, we didn’t solve all
my problems, but I feel better about them. Actually, I think I’ve found
the answer. Although I’m convinced I did it on my own, I’m thankful for
the great support I received.
By the way, I can still access all of my Outlook folders, and all the
rules still work. NEO just made the management of my correspondence more
streamlined. I actually look forward to checking my e-mail now, knowing
my faithful assistant, NEO, has already organized it.
About the Author
Roberta Bragg, MCSE: Security, CISSP, Security+, and Microsoft MVP is a Redmond contributing editor and the owner of Have Computer Will Travel Inc., an independent firm specializing in information security and operating systems. She's series editor for Osborne/McGraw-Hill's Hardening series, books that instruct you on how to secure your networks before you are hacked, and author of the first book in the series, Hardening Windows Systems.