There鈥檚 nothing that gets your attention quite so fast as receiving a threat that your e-mail will be shut down.
That鈥檚 what鈥檚 happened to some people around the University as they came too close to exceeding their allotted disk space. Computing & Communication would issue a 鈥渇orm letter鈥 saying, 鈥淐lean out your files or we鈥檙e going to cut you off.鈥
The trouble is, says C&C鈥檚 Bob Jamieson, most people have been unaware of disk space quotas and have had no way to know that they were exceeding theirs until they received the warning.
Well, that shouldn鈥檛 happen anymore. A C&C team led by Jamieson has created a disk space gauge to quickly tell campus users how much space they鈥檙e using and which folders are consuming the most space. The easiest way to use it is to go to your My天美影院page and look under e-mail. There you will see a graph that tells you what percentage of your allotted space is being used. To learn more, click 鈥渄etails鈥 and then 鈥渧iew.鈥 You鈥檒l get a list of all your e-mail folders and Web pages and how many megabytes worth of material are in each.
From there it鈥檚 a matter of going to the offending folders and deleting unneeded messages. You can then return to the tool and click 鈥渦pdate鈥 to find out how much you鈥檝e been able to improve your situation.
Jamieson says the new tool was created in response to requests from users. 鈥淧eople were getting space warnings at the least opportune time,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey鈥檇 be in the middle of a grant application or something, and they鈥檇 have to deal with this.鈥
That happened because e-mail software does not display how much disk space is used by e-mail as a whole, nor does e-mail software display the disk space used by each folder.
So C&C created a team to take on the project. Jamieson had gathered the e-mail from people who had requested a tool, and he shared this with his team members. They then held a focus group with computer support people around campus. Ultimately they built a prototype of the tool and tested it on customers.
Some changes were made based on feedback from users, and the tool went live last week. In addition to the My天美影院site (http://myuw.washington.edu/ ), it can be found on the NetID service page ( ) and the WebPine login page ( ).
In addition to the information about disk space, the tool links to a reference screen titled 鈥淢anaging your storage space鈥 that provides information on how to prevent and solve problems. C&C has also created a page, , that gives general information about e-mail at the University.
This won鈥檛 be the end of the project, Jamieson says. The team is exploring some new bells and whistles for the tool 鈥 for example, a service people could sign up for that would remind them to check their space allotment periodically or notify them when they were at, say, 85 percent of capacity.
But that鈥檚 down the road. In the meantime, C&C hopes the new tool will encourage people to clean out those 3-year-old sent messages about projects long since completed, especially the ones with space-eating attachments. And the team is always interested in feedback. Direct your comments about the disk space gauge to: help@cac.washington.edu.