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Gmail rolled out Priority Inbox last week and it’s pretty awesome. It’s like my much beloved Sort by Magic for Google Reader but for Gmail.

Priority Inbox learns from how you interact with your email, who are the real people you’re actually interacting with, which emails do you actually open, and which ones do you click through and uses that information to pull important emails to the top of your inbox.

For the past year or so, I’ve been using a mass of filters to try to keep non-priority emails out of my inbox entirely but I want to play with Priority Inbox and see how smart Gmail really is so I needed to edit my filtering system. Priority Inbox has an option to override filters but after 2 days, I could already tell that it didn’t actually do a good job of overriding filters at least the way I had mine set up.

gmail filter import export lab

In Gmail labs you can enable the ability to import and export your filters. Before you mess with your filters, back up your current setup and keep a clean copy of that back up (with that clean copy you don’t have to worry about messing up or breaking anything, you can always delete all your changes and reupload your old set up).

I decided I wanted to maintain all of my filters that label my emails but I wanted to dump and start fresh on my filters that either mark emails as read or have them skip the inbox so that I could really see the power of Priority Inbox.

Gmail does not have a good interface for searching or editing your existing filters but I discovered that I could open my filter export file in a basic text editor (TextEdit on a Mac, Notepad on a PC) and use a find and replace function (Edit menu then Find) to remove the lines of code that marked as read or skipped the inbox. To do this:

  • locate one line of the code you want to remove
  • copy and paste the entire line into the find field
  • leave the replace field blank
  • hit replace all
  • repeat as necessary for any other types of filters you want to remove

Then I deleted all my filters in Gmail (make sure you keep that back up copy handy in case you want to go back to what you were doing before) and uploaded my edited filters file.

Now I can actually see how smart Priority Inbox is and how fast it learns.

To really make Priority Inbox a powerhouse, Gmail or Apple needs to work out an option so that only the items in my Priority Inbox show up in my iPhone inbox.

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Lately I’ve been doing a lot of iPhone troubleshooting for my family members and have saved them a few trips to the Genius Bar. Let’s hope these fixes save you a trip too.

iphone location services menuDad thought his GPS was broken because the TomTom app could not locate his current position. However, the GPS could locate him on the Maps app so I knew it wasn’t really broken. To fix this we went into Settings > General > Location Services and we found that the TomTom app had not been allowed to use his current location. When an app asks you if it can use your current location and your current location is essential to the functionality of that app you need to choose the allow option or the app won’t work.

Then dad had so many apps launched with the new multitasking feature in iOS 4 that it wouldn’t allow him to launch any more apps (I haven’t encountered this problem myself so I have no idea how many apps he was running at once). Double click the home button (hard circle button) then all the apps you’re currently running will show up in a bar at the bottom and you can scroll through and find an app to close. To close it press on the icon and then a minus sign will appear which you can press to exit the app.

When you get a new iPhone and transfer over all your settings from your old iPhone, your passwords do not transfer. My sister went almost a year and a half not being able to send email from her iPhone because she thought you couldn’t reenter your SMTP password. You can by going to Settings > Mail, Contacts Calenders > select the appropriate mail account > Account Info > Outgoing Mail Server SMTP > Primary Server and then you can enter the password. You have the dig through quite a few menus so I understand why should couldn’t find it. And of course, two weeks after I showed her how to do this she got yet another new iPhone and we had to do it all over again.

Let me know if you have an iPhone problem I can help you with.

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