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Inbox Pause - A pause button for incoming mail in Gmail [Chrome extension]

56 points| mikejchin | 13 years ago |inboxpause.com | reply

34 comments

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[+] brittohalloran|13 years ago|reply
The manual method:

1. Create filter "subject(*)" -> Skip Inbox, Apply Label "INBOXPAUSE"

2. There is no step 2

To "unpause"

1. Delete filter (too bad you can't turn them off/on)

2. Go to label "INBOXPAUSE", select all, move to inbox

Works for web-based as well as mobile, which is nice. The primary benefit of this extension is that it reminds you that you're paused with an overlay.

[+] baydinalex|13 years ago|reply
Inbox Pause is also quite a bit easier and less technical, I think!

If you want to do this manually, the filter above will probably let stuff slip through on some percentage of accounts. We found "from:(*) label:inbox" to be the most reliable. Or just, you know, click the pause button :)

(I helped write Inbox Pause)

[+] kpozin|13 years ago|reply
You can turn off a filter by adding an impossible condition, such as subject:thisfilterisoff.
[+] agscala|13 years ago|reply
I'm always blown away when I hear about the sheer volume of incoming email that some people have to deal with. I may get 10 a day, but apparently getting hundreds isn't all that uncommon.

It's unreal that a product like this even exists. Though no doubt it's useful for people that receive a never-ending deluge of email.

[+] vtail|13 years ago|reply
I currently work as a PM in a big company. Yesterday I've got slightly over 200 emails; it is a typical day.

Granted, some of those were CC:, and people like to have one-line replies, but I still have to read each one nevertheless just to make sure it is not something I need urgently respond to.

[+] georgemcbay|13 years ago|reply
I guess I'm old fashioned in that I pause my inbox by closing gmail.
[+] jaaronlong|13 years ago|reply
A nice feature of Inbox Pause is that it will actually prevent messages from being sent to your phone or mobile device. So, its truly a break from email. Additionally, if you have a huge pile of email you need to work through without the distractions of new incoming mail, closing Gmail isn't really an option.
[+] friggeri|13 years ago|reply
One thing I'd really want to see in an email client is a set of "reply today", "reply tomorrow" and "reply later" buttons, linked to my todo list or calendar.
[+] baydinalex|13 years ago|reply
You might want to check out our core product, Boomerang. You just choose a date when you want to see an email again. It kicks the message into a label until that time, then brings it back to the top of your inbox, so you can reply when you're ready. We think Inbox Pause goes well with the same core theme.

(I helped write Inbox Pause)

[+] vtail|13 years ago|reply
You mean like those Follow Up flags in Outlook that are one right-click away?
[+] madiator|13 years ago|reply
Does anybody know why the extension wants to 'access your tabs and browsing activity'. Is this permission required for it to work?
[+] aboodman|13 years ago|reply
It's necessary only because of one function call: chrome.windows.create().

We hope to remove the need for this permission in order to do basic tab management soon: http://crbug.com/137404.

[+] filipevalente|13 years ago|reply
Things like this reaching the first page on HN really tells a lot about is going on with the tech business. Jesus... create a fuckin' filter... or learn to manage yourself and you email.

"the paradigm-shiftingest, game-changingest email innovation of 2012"

I just puked.

[+] ilaksh|13 years ago|reply
Great idea, but its sort of like temporarily damming up a whitewater in order to avoid being drowned. You know you are going to be slammed when you remove the dam.
[+] viraj_shah|13 years ago|reply
Seems like this is a combination of filters, labels, and vacation responders to "pause" messages. Nice hack but may be good to disclose that all your mail correspondences will receive an automated message about Inbox Pause. Personally I don't like it (the vacation responder), so it seems easy enough to disable while keeping the actual pausing functionality. Otherwise nice tool!
[+] eclipticplane|13 years ago|reply
I get exceptions when trying it with both my regular Gmail account and my Google Apps for Domains account:

  GET http://inboxpause.baydin.com/[email protected] 403 (FORBIDDEN)
  
  GET http://inboxpause.baydin.com/[email protected] 403 (FORBIDDEN)
  
  Uncaught ReferenceError: show_authentication_error is not defined
Any ideas?
[+] mikejchin|13 years ago|reply
Oops, sorry about that. It looks like we forgot to include some error handling code. An error message was supposed to appear there.

I'm guessing that it's an issue with cookies. Do you have third-party cookies enabled? Try enabling that (or create an exception for inboxpause.baydin.com). If it still doesn't work, please email us at [email protected], and we'll take a look. Thanks!

[+] sailfrog|13 years ago|reply
It's a good feature idea (I implemented a similar one in my open source webmail application a few years ago, I called it "freeze folder") but to go as far as "Paradigm shifted. Game changed" is over the top.
[+] hongquan|13 years ago|reply
This sounds like a pretty cool product. Just wish I had it when I went on vacation last week.
[+] djbender|13 years ago|reply
If you suffer from this much incoming mail, you may want to reconsider the purpose of your email.
[+] ramblerman|13 years ago|reply
Meet INBOX PAUSE - the paradigm-shiftingest, game-changingest email innovation of 2012

That's a bold statement for something that achieves the same as "closing gmail".

I know people get sensitive about the negativity on here, but this warrants a little fair game critisicm in my book.

[+] natep|13 years ago|reply
Yes, the copy is exaggerated for humorous effect, but can you search, read, and reply to old emails while gmail is closed? Clearly, this extension does offer something more than your solution.
[+] waleedka|13 years ago|reply
Maybe you missed the humor tone in that headline. The meaning is the opposite of what the words say.