MailFollowup and MailRecent are sure to be welcome by heavy users of Mail. And the best thing about them is that they’re so well integrated into Mail that they seem as if they’ve been part of. MailRecent Mail Plugin adds 'Copy to Recent,' 'Move to Recent,' and 'Go to Recent' menu items to Apple's Mail application. These menu items contain dynamically-updated lists of recently used.
I’ve covered a number of products in Mac Gems that extend Mail’s capabilities, Some, such as MailTags, Mail Act-On, and MailEnhancer, add significant new features, whereas others, such as Letterbox and DockStar, simply add viewing enhancements that make Mail more useable. Today’s Gems are somewhere in between; they add new features, but ones that are so simple they look like they’ve always been there—and likely should have been.
Have you ever wanted to re-send a message to a recipient with a comment or additional information? In other words, to follow up on the message? You can select a message in Mail’s Sent mailbox and then choose Send Again from the Message menu, but that just gives you an identical copy of the original. If you want a clear follow-up , you should somehow indicate what was the content of the original message and what’s your follow-up text. Gregory Welch’s MailFollowup 1.0.4 ( ; free) is a Mail plug-in that does just that.
After installing MailFollowup—using the included installer, or by manually dragging the MailFollowup.mailbundle package into ~/Library/Mail/Bundles—Mail’s Message and contextual menus host a new Followup item.
Select a sent message and then choose this menu item, and a copy of the sent message will be opened. But this copy will contain the original email text in quoted form, including the date and time of the original message, making it clear that you’re following up on a previous email. (The subject is also edited to read “Re: original subject .”)
If you don’t want to include all of the original message in your follow-up, just select the text you want to include and then choose the Followup command.
It’s true that you can approximate this functionality by using the Reply or Reply All command and then rearranging recipient addresses. But why go to all that trouble when MailFollowup makes the process simple and easy?
Gregory’s other plug-in, MailRecent 1.0 ( ; free), makes viewing and filing your mail easier. Once installed, you get three new menu items: Messages: Move to Recent; Messages: Copy to Recent; and Mailboxes: Go to Recent.
Mail Recent Review
The former two options are for managing your email: select a message and then mouse down to Messages: Move to Recent. The sub-menu will list any folders to which you’ve recently moved other messages; choose one and the message will be moved to that folder. Copy to Recent works similarly, except that a copy of the message will be created in the chosen folder; the original will remain in its current location. (Mail’s built-in Move To and Copy To submenus remember the last folder used, but only that single folder; MailRecent remembers multiple recent folders.)
The third new option, Go to Recent, switches the main Mail window view to the folder you choose; like the other two new menus, its sub-menu is populated with those folders to which you’ve recently moved or copied a message.
These new options might not seem that useful to someone with only a few mail folders, but if you’re a heavy email user with many folders and sub-folders, or if you tend to file mail in bunches to the same folder—for example, when you’re receiving lots of email about specific work projects, each with its own folder—these new menu items can be major time-savers. (They’re also useful for people who prefer to read their email in separate windows, rather than Mail’s preview pane, since you can’t drag-and-drop messages to folders while viewing them in separate windows.)
How many recent items are listed? That’s determined by the “Number of Recent Items” setting for Documents in the Appearance pane of System Preferences. (Which means that this setting must be set to something other than None for the plug-in to have any usefulness.) Unfortunately, none of these new sub-menus lists folders you’ve simply viewed ; rather, they list only those folders to which you’ve actually moved or copied a message, either by using the Move To command or by dragging-and-dropping a message from one folder/mailbox to another.
Mail Recent
(By default, the recent items are sorted alphabetically; if you’d prefer to have them sorted by time [in order of recent use] or frequency [in order of how often you’ve used each folder], instructions for modifying the plug-in can be found on the MailRecent Web page.)
MailFollowup and MailRecent are sure to be welcome by heavy users of Mail. And the best thing about them is that they’re so well integrated into Mail that they seem as if they’ve been part of the app from the beginning. (And some would argue that they very well should have been.)
Mail Recinto De Ciencias Medicas
MailFollowup and MailRecent require Mac OS X 10.4.1 or later—and the corresponding version of Mail—and are Universal binaries.