Search DominoPower's 11,441 Lotus-related article archive 
Home
EasyPrint
News details Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Articles-only Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Twitter Feed Click here for the Twitter feed.
THOSE AMAZING USERS
Is English-only a viable mail management strategy?
By Nancy Hand

Tech is not a warm, cuddly Ewok. It's not quite Jabba the Hut, but then what is? Unwanted mail is a problem whether it's electronic or paper. It's just that the electronic stuff can be so much more annoying. At last count, the various filters at the company gateway were stopping over 90% of mail directed at the domain, and e-junk was still getting through.

"A while back, one of the managers decided to spin up the CEO."

Explaining this to users has limited effect. The same person who merely grumbles about the paper junk arriving at their home can find ways to either crash the mail servers or spin up a manager to breathe down your neck while you "fix" the unfixable. A while back, one of the managers decided to spin up the CEO.

It started with an uptick in unwanted mail. Over the weekend, the volume of mail addressed to the company's domain jumped exponentially. On Monday morning, as the people in charge of the gateways dug their way out of the mess, users started opening mail. Some people found they had hundreds of unwanted messages and promptly called the help desk. They were given a shoulder to cry on and directions to delete the e-junk.

At the end of the week, some people were still getting more e-junk than they thought they should. So they started forwarding it to the help desk. The folks on the help desk then, very graciously, forwarded it to the mail admins. We gave them a lecture and deleted the e-junk they sent us.

One manager felt this response was inadequate. He forwarded a piece of e-junk to several other managers, a couple of vice presidents, and the CEO demanding such mail be stopped. From there, the message was forwarded back down the chain and, eventually, landed in the Inbox of the admin who could do least about it, me.

I opened the memo and scrolled to the bottom. Turquoise lettering on a bright pink background made it difficult to look at the original message. The alphabet appeared to be Cyrillic and the language might have been Russian but the message itself was an HTML image, so I couldn't even copy it into a translation program to see what it said.

I scrolled back up through the memo to see what was being requested. The first manager had demanded that all mail not using the "English alphabet" be rejected at the gateway. None of the recipients had offered an opinion before forwarding the message on to the next group. The manager who had sent it to me simply wanted to know what it would take to implement the request.

Like most large firms, our company has a multi-national staff doing business globally. I'd opened enough mailboxes to see the business-related messages using the "English" alphabet, to communicate in Vietnamese, Hindi, Spanish, and French. I'd even seen some using "non-English" alphabets, including Cyrillic.


1  ·  2  ·  Next »
Other articles you might like
Home > Strategies > Email Management (60 articles)
   Using the Notes Client with Gmail
   Using the Notes client with Hotmail (or not)
   Centralised email encryption at the Domino server level
Home > Tips & Techniques (102 articles)
   More about Domino log files
   Why your log.nsf might not be purging properly
   A faster way to repair corrupted server files
Home > Strategies > Those Amazing Users (13 articles)
   Willy and Wally install a SAN
   More archive fun
   Fun rolling out a Notes upgrade
Get Weekly Email Updates
Subscribe to our regular weekly email newsletter. It's packed with tips, reviews, deep analysis, and the latest news.
 
Recent DominoPower Articles
Application development, William Shatner, and the origin of the universe
Learn Domino Designer 8.5 for free
The (near) future of Sametime, Quickr, Connections, and Symphony
Inside the IBM Innovations lab
Lotusphere 2010: Hot fixes and cool news for Notes, Domino, and LotusLive
Lotusphere 2010: mobility and collaboration
2010: A Lotusphere of change
Latest Lotus Headlines
Xpages not loading? JVM errors? - Solution
How to implement an iCalendar feed into your Notes calendar with XPages
DWA Hotfixes for Domino 8.5.1FP1 - A Gotcha
IBM Adds DB2 to Lotus Foundations SMB Package
SNTT : XPages onclick Ghosts in the machine
Ports used by Lotus Sametime 8.5 servers
Exploring a Domino Date Bug
>> Read all the news
More from the ZATZ journals
Computing Unplugged: The iPad defenders have spoken
David Gewirtz Online: CNN commentary and analysis
OutlookPower: More about disappearing text
-- Advertisement --

Find unused Lotus Notes groups and clean up your address book
Have you ever wanted to get rid of old Lotus Notes groups that were cluttering up your address book, but you weren't sure if they were used? Find Unused Groups can help.

Find Unused Groups will check your ACL, mail, multi purpose and server groups to help you determine if they are used, and who uses them.

Learn how to easily clean up your address book.

-- Advertisement --

Mark your calendar for in-depth Lotus training, May 12-14, Boston
Join experts and peers May 12-14 in Boston for educational and networking events that deliver real-world Lotus training so you can increase productivity and efficiency in your company, advance your skills, and squeeze the most from your current environment. One registration gets you into THE VIEW's Admin2010 and Lotus Developer2010.

Register by April 10 to save $200.
ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
Copyright © 1998-2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Editor's Login