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Bloghome at www.klastrup.dk

This is the research diary of researcher Lisbeth Klastrup, since february 2001 sharing her thoughts on life, universe, persistent online worlds, games, interactive stories and internet oddities with you on the www.

I am currently on leave from the IT University of Copenhagen, and from aug. 2006 - aug. 2007 working as Associate Research Professor at the Center for Design Research Copenhagen, an independant center situated at the School of Architecture. During this year, I will be working on a book about the development of aesthetics, design and interaction on the WWW, together with colleague Ida Engholm.

My blog often reflects how busy I am in general, so posting may be pretty irregular, as well as my potential response to comments. But I read them!

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lisbethATklastrupDOTdk

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6.10.04
Female mailboxes 
According to this article in Politiken (referring to an UK study which I havent been able to track down), women are better at organising their mail (deleting it in their inbox) and are more happy about using email as a form of communication than their male counterparts which would rather use the phone (59%). I'm not quite sure what this says about communication patterns, brain use and other topics which frequently pop up in gender conversations. I'd like to see some comparisons on how much time you spend sorting out practical details via mail compared to sorting them out on the phone. And how much "chat-mail" which is not work-related do men send compared to women? How many "look at this URL with pictures of women exploiting men, ha ha" mails do men send compared to women? Now see stats on that would be really interesting!

The survey was made by Xerox and actually builds on interviews with 508 managers. From the scientific point of validity, I wonder how many of these are actually women?

The most interesting thing about the Politiken article is that they have a little onsite survey asking people how many mails they have in their inbox. Today, the stats look like this (I hope Politiken is not going to sue me for quoting this):
0 12%
1 - 50 36%
51 - 100 11%
101 - 250 10%
251 - 500 9%
501 - 1.000 7%
More than 1.001 14%
(3170 people had done the poll at the time of writing)

I find the fact that 14% have more than 1001 mails in their inbox comforting.
I've started to feel like a very disorganised woman - I read all my mails but I havent found the time to sort them since august, so I've currently reached a peek of 1626 mails in the inbox. How many mails do you have in yours? Do you feel disorganised?


Comments:
Heh. I fell over that survey too and thought that it must been done on Outlook-users. I used to heavily organise my mails, but now my Inbox is filled up with 756 messages and still going strong. Why the sudden change? Thunderbird. It just makes searching so easy, whereas the Outlook I'm stuck with at work is absolutely horrid, so I have to organise.

However I still feel a bit disorganised, but that has to do with the huge mess of paper accumulating on and in the near vicinity of my desk. I swear, some of it seemed to snarl at me earlier. Must grab the phone and call a friend about it, I am male after all :P
 
Silly me, forgot to sign.

.: Tore Vesterby :: http://vesterblog.dk :.
 
Hmmm. I only have 58 in my Inbox - but I do have 24,450 in my sent file!! Not including the sent emails, I have 6922 emails in my email program right now, filed under assorted headings. yikes!
 
I find it incredibly weird to use the amount of mail in a mailbox as an indicator of "being good at email" - why is that? Huh?

In my three main inboxes I have 650+1163+2500 = total of 4313.

(I don't sort into topic-oriented folders - why would I? And I archive email once a year.)
 
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Death Stories project
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Site feed Link (Atom)
Klastrup family?

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Buy our book

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Conferences
ACE 2007
Mobile Media 2007
MobileCHI 07
Perth DAC 2007
DIGRA 2007
AOIR 8.0/2007

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My Ph.D. thesis website:
Towards a Poetics of Virtual Worlds


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Misc
I also used to host & work in a world called StoryMOO.