erik: A Chibi-style cartoon of me! (Default)
Both, And... ([personal profile] erik) wrote in [site community profile] dw_suggestions2011-08-21 10:57 am

Provide IMAP (or POP) access to the DW Inbox.

Title:
Provide IMAP (or POP) access to the DW Inbox.

Area:
DW Inbox

Summary:
I find the DW inbox cumbersome to use when it gets overfull. I'd much rather manage it like any other mailbox, in a mail application.

Description:
I've never liked the message feature of LJ/DW. I've always felt it was a weak email function bolted onto the featureset as an afterthought, serving a function that would be better served by actual email.

With that in mind I think it would be nice to be able to manage it like email, in a real email application. To do that, I'd need IMAP (or at least POP) access to my DW message inbox. This would allow me to filter out the messages I don't need to see (such as crossposting success notifications, which I cannot elect to not receive, or messages I have to get in my DW inbox in order to be allowed to get them emailed, such as comment notifications)

Poll #7884 Provide IMAP (or POP) access to the DW Inbox.
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 63


This suggestion:

View Answers

Should be implemented as-is.
11 (17.5%)

Should be implemented with changes. (please comment)
2 (3.2%)

Shouldn't be implemented.
24 (38.1%)

(I have no opinion)
26 (41.3%)

(Other: please comment)
0 (0.0%)

denise: Image: Me, facing away from camera, on top of the Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome (Default)

[staff profile] denise 2011-08-22 11:47 am (UTC)(link)
FYI, what I do with those is use the "filter to this entry" link and then use the "delete all" button -- it can clear out your inbox remarkably quickly. Or, use the "Entries & Comments" filter on the left-hand side of the inbox, and then use the "delete all" button.

(And yes, we do have a bug open to allow people to set notifications to bypass the inbox -- it's a lot harder than it looks, especially since we can't just apply LJ's patches directly to our code anymore.)
matgb: Artwork of 19th century upper class anarchist, text: MatGB (Default)

[personal profile] matgb 2011-08-22 12:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Different things to different people. To you and me, we want everything emailed to us. To others,t hey don't want anything emailed to them from the site, ever (I've seen arguments about privacy, shared email accounts, other things). Some people loath email with a passion and just about manage webmail but get annoyed by spam.

When it was introduced, it also allowed us to be notified of stuff we couldn't be previously-for example, I'm subscribed to every comment made on this entire comm, that's part of the same feature that created the inbox. I regularly subscribe to comments made on a specific post and find that very useful.

But for some people, they really don't want to be emailed, at all, and want everything managed on site. Plus, giving out email addresses directly is viewed by many as a privacy concern, some people only want their email shared to people they trust and don't want multiple email accounts (these people are not me, you can google my home address and phone number), so the ability to contact people directly and privately on site and then have the site email you is, for those people, good.

FWIW, Brad had been working on the feature for a long time before 6A bought LJ, and so ads weren't anything to do with initial motivation, although it was 6A's money that let the thing actually be finished, although I'm told the code has never been what you might call 'good'.
denise: Image: Me, facing away from camera, on top of the Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome (Default)

[staff profile] denise 2011-08-22 01:12 pm (UTC)(link)
[personal profile] matgb mentioned reasons for the tracking system as a whole, but (as I was there at the time) I can tell you precisely why LJ introduced the inbox in particular: many email providers would eat mail from LJ, or treat it like spam, because LJ sent out so much email that many providers thought the high volume indicated they/we were spammy spammers who spammed. So, the inbox was a method for collecting all your comment replies/notices of things you wanted to be notified about in addition to having an email sent to you, in case the email went astray.

Many people, myself included, use the inbox as a "oh yeah I wanted to reply to that" collector -- I clean out my inbox once every few days and delete the comments I know I'm not going to reply to or the comments I know I've already replied to, and what's left is essentially a to-do list.
musyc: Silver flute resting diagonally across sheet music (Default)

[personal profile] musyc 2011-08-22 03:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Many people, myself included, use the inbox as a "oh yeah I wanted to reply to that" collector

Guilty.
deborah: the Library of Congress cataloging numbers for children's literature, technology, and library science (Default)

[personal profile] deborah 2011-08-22 05:18 pm (UTC)(link)
see, I could get some utility out of it, but only if we could control what goes to it. For example, I find it much more difficult to deal with direct messages when they are in this inbox with all of these notifications I don't want there. I understand that I can filter, but I still find that extra step to make my life more difficult. If I could configure what arrives in my inbox, then it would become useful to me.
denise: Image: Me, facing away from camera, on top of the Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome (Default)

[staff profile] denise 2011-08-23 02:55 am (UTC)(link)
The issue is, having to run an IMAP (or POP) server is something else that's not directly connected to our main mission, something we're not very good at (none of us have any real experience with mail protocols; although most of us have run mail servers in the past, that's totally different than generating the things that will appear through the server), and something that doesn't carry a tremendous amount of value-added. To borrow an oft-mocked term from management-speak, it's not playing to our core competencies and it's not something that improves the site as a whole for everybody (only a very few people, mostly geeks, would use this, and while we're not opposed to implementing things that make life easier for a few people, we are opposed to implementing things that only affect a few people when it takes on a lot of maintenance and upkeep in areas that we're not very experienced in).

An example here is the old "LJTalk" jabber server -- very few people used it because they all had their own messaging systems already and it fell prey to the bootstrap problem, and maintaining the server (which had to be custom-built to support the LJ integration) was something that nobody really cared about and nobody was good at. Result, something that was down more often than it was up and that made LJ look bad because it wasn't very well maintained. We don't want to get into that pattern unless there's a very compelling reason for it.

The core impetus of your suggestion seems to be "make the inbox accessible via IMAP so I can clean it out more easily", which isn't a highly compelling argument to me, mostly because we do have a bug already open to revamp the notifications system so that you can bypass inbox notification. (LJ has already done this, but it's a massive undertaking and we've diverged far enough from LJ that we can't import their patches anymore.) Absent a much stronger reason why this would be a good thing for the majority of the users (not just a few outliers), I really don't think this would be a good use of our time.
green_knight: (Solutions)

[personal profile] green_knight 2011-08-23 05:40 pm (UTC)(link)
I haven't voted yet - my first impulse was 'oh, yes, PLEASE' because there are 1500 things in my inbox and most of them are notifications and I've completely lost track of them' but I will vote 'with changes' and add my voice to those who want to see the system revamped to make comment management easier.

Because of the now 1300 things (I deleted circle changes wholesale) it now says all (1385) Messages (10) Entries and comments (548). What I really want to filter out and delete wholesale are the crosspost successful/not successful messages, but I can't select them.

So better choices which messages we receive (email only, inbox only e-mail and inbox) and better inbox management tools, please.
denise: Image: Me, facing away from camera, on top of the Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome (Default)

[staff profile] denise 2011-08-24 03:21 am (UTC)(link)
There are already bugs for all of those. (The problem is that the notification system is very, very complex, and requires someone with a lot of experience to make changes in it.)
havocthecat: the lady of shalott (Default)

[personal profile] havocthecat 2011-08-22 03:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Way back when, my company blocked all web email sites. My company did not block the LJ or DW inbox. Because of that, I used the inbox to manage my LJ and DW comments for a very long time.

This may be an unnecessary "feature" that annoys you, but it's actually something that can be rather useful to other people.
arethinn: glowing green spiral (Default)

[personal profile] arethinn 2011-08-22 05:14 pm (UTC)(link)
And yes, we do have a bug open to allow people to set notifications to bypass the inbox

YAY. "Delete all" helps, but I'd really rather they weren't accumulating in the first place.