From 6f6db2fa60a811ff1412a4cca2b5699854b2d68d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Hugo Thunnissen Date: Mon, 17 Feb 2020 12:40:52 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Make the intro more comfortable to read --- .../index.html | 22 ++++++++++--------- 1 file changed, 12 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) diff --git a/posts/use-your-mail-client-for-physical-mail/index.html b/posts/use-your-mail-client-for-physical-mail/index.html index 5f56f82..43bb8cf 100644 --- a/posts/use-your-mail-client-for-physical-mail/index.html +++ b/posts/use-your-mail-client-for-physical-mail/index.html @@ -54,16 +54,18 @@

How To Use Your Email Client For Physical Mail

- Whether it's to re-read a conversation, find a plane ticket I ordered or check - when a meeting was planned, I often find myself looking up old emails. It's - usually easy to do so because email clients are designed for the task: Many of - them support full-text search and some even complement that with advanced - tagging and categorization systems. To be honest I have become completely - dependent on those features for my day to day operation. Having full-text - search and some sort of categorization for mail can be a huge time - saver. Wouldn't it be nice if we had all of that functionality to deal with - physical mail as well? I thought it would, so I set out to find a way to - achieve just that. Turns out it's pretty simple! + Whether it's to re-read a conversation, find a plane ticket I ordered or + check when a meeting was planned, I often find myself looking up old + emails. It's usually easy to do so because email clients are designed for + the task: Many of them support full-text search and some even complement + that with neat tagging and categorization systems. To be honest I have + become completely dependent on those features for my day to day + life. Having full-text search and some sort of categorization for email + can be a huge time saver. When it comes to physical mail however, I still + have to browse through stacks of paper to (hopefully) find what I'm + looking for. I figured that it'd be nice to use my fancy email client to + deal with physical mail as well, so I found a way to do just that. Turns + out it's pretty simple!