Free TimesSelect is here
with the wave of your Columbia/Barnard email address.

And although you have to give your CU email to the Times, (and to all your professors and Michelle Diamond and Lee Bollinger and Austin [!] Quigley), that doesn’t mean you have to deal with CubMail, Columbia’s the homage to 2002’s latest technologies. After the jump is Mark Holden’s guide to forwarding email to Gmail. It ran about a year ago and remains some of the most usable and earnest advice Bwog’s ever given.

Being a Columbia student means dealing with e-mail. Craploads of it. You have an account through the school, but you’d do yourself a favor by getting a colorful Gmail account from our friends at Google. Why? Infinite storage space, accessibility from any computer, rapid-fire messages that don’t clutter your inbox, the best spam filter available, and a fun chat feature! Bwog staffer Mark Holden offers this guide to the best e-mail system out there.

 


Step 1:
Join the club 

First, you need to get a Gmail account. (If you already have one, skip to the next paragraph.) As we’ll see shortly, your account name doesn’t matter, so sign up for whatever’s available. If you have a cell phone (you do have one, right? you are a college student, right?), you can sign up directly at www.gmail.com; if you don’t, you need to find a friend to invite you; if that fails, try emailing hottchik6969@gmail.com for one (read on to find out); if all of the above fail, look here for more options. So get Gmail and come back when you’re done. Bookmark this page if necessary. I’ll wait… …Done? Good! Next, we need to forward all your Columbia mail to Gmail. To do that, log in to Cubmail, go to options, then delivery settings, then “edit your delivery settings,” then “edit your email delivery settings,” then “Login to edit your UNI account,” then about 2/3rds down click “Email forwarding.” (Do you still wonder why you’re switching? Good grief.) Enter your new Gmail address and click save. Phew! Take a good look at Cubmail, because this is the last ti me you’ll be seeing it for a very long time (forever if all goes well). If you feel any sort of nostalgia, slap yourself in the face right now.

Step 2: Set up your accounts

So now all your Columbia email is forwarded to your Gmail account. But you may be wondering — when I respond to a message someone sends me, will it show as my Columbia address or my Gmail address? This is especially important if you chose “hottchik6969” or something goofy like that for your Gmail name. Fortunately, you can spare the world your silliness. Log in to your shiny new Gmail account and click “Settings” in the top-right, then click the “Accounts” tab. See the option “Send mail as”? Surprise surprise, that does exactly what it sounds like — allows you to send mail from your Gmail account and have it appear as if it’s coming from another account. Click “Add another email address”. Enter in your CU email. Click “Next step >>” then “Send verification”.

Now, here’s the nifty part. Gmail sends a verification email to the account you’ve just specified to make sure you really own the account. But since your email is already forwarded, the e-mail goes straight to your Gmail account. So go to your inbox, grab the code, and verify your account. Then go back to the accounts tab in settings and make sure that you’ve told Gmail to reply from the same address the message was sent to for all your accounts (it’s right below the account list). Voila! You can now receive and send email from your Columbia account in Gmail with no one on the outside world the wiser. Go take a break and celebrate with some champagne.

Step 3: Make it pretty

Inebriated? Good! Since our aim in switching is maximum efficiency and sanity, it will pay to take a few minutes now to configure Gmail for ease of use. Go to settings again, then go to the general tab. The important options are keyboard shortcuts, personal level indicators, and snippets, all of which should be enabled. Then click on the “Web Clips” tab and uncheck the box that says “Show my web clips above the Inbox.” They’ll only distract you when you need to work. Trust me. Personal level indicators and snippets make it easier and quicker to understand the context and contents of a message. Keyboard shortcuts allow you to use Gmail about ten times faster. Here’s a list of Gmail’s keyboard shortcuts. It looks daunting, but once you start applying them it becomes second-nature. Learn them. Use them. Love them.


Step 4:
Be an e-mail packrat

Gmail gives you almost three gigabytes of storage (and growing). That’s twelve times as much as Cubmail offers. It’s enough so that you’ll probably never have to delete a message. That, in fact, is Gmail’s great strength, and it’s where “archiving” comes in. Anything you want to be able to refer to later, highlight and press “Archive”–the message will leave your inbox, but be availible forever. To access archived messages, you can click “All Mail” on the left, or use Google’s immensely powerful search technology to find exactly what you want. Enter your query in the text box right next to the Gmail logo and hit enter to find any e-mail containing that search term. Voila! Here’s a further explanation of searching in Gmail. As with the keyboard shortcuts, it’s well worth spending some time now to learn the ropes. It will prevent much greater headaches later.

Step 5: Streamlining (or the “secondary inbox”)

You’ve probably used folders in the past to group your email (I’ll bet you had one for your college applications). Labels are similar to folders. The nifty thing about them, though, is that one message can have multiple labels at the same time. So if you have an email from one of your professors (label “classes” or “LitHum”) that’s really important and needs action soon, you can also apply the label “!important” to it so that you’ll remember to deal with it.

Pretty cool so far. But the real power of Gmail comes when you combine labels with filters. Supposing, for example, you’re a member of some campus group whose members are especially prolific with the email exchange (cough blueandwhite cough), you probably don’t want all those messages cluttering up your inbox. However, you do want an easy way to read and manage them. Enter filters. Filters simply specify a certain set of actions Gmail should take when it receives an email that fits certain criteria. So for our imaginary student group’s mailing list, you’d simply specify all messages sent to “mailinglistaddress@columbia.edu”, as shown on the right. Simple, right? Here comes the magic. Go to the next step and tell Gmail to archive the message and apply a label for the group. Now, whenever you want to view the messages for that group, you can simply click the group’s label on the left. The label will even tell you how many unread messages there are! What you have created is in effect a secondary inbox within your main Gmail account. Don’t tell me that’s not useful.

Step 6: RTFM!

Look up the acronym. What I’ve discussed here only scratches the surface of the sophisticated uses to which you can put Gmail’s filters, labels, accounts, and forwarding if you’re creative. If you want to learn more, the best place is Gmail itself, then searching the web. Read the help pages. Learn. It will pay off in saved time and headaches down the road.