her209
No Lifer
- Oct 11, 2000
 
- 56,336
 
- 11
 
- 0
 
whistle blower?Originally posted by: Goosemaster
well hello there...mind giving me some suga baby:lips:Originally posted by: mb
I sure as hell didn't grow on a tree.
*grabs mb's rape whistle*
whistle blower?Originally posted by: Goosemaster
well hello there...mind giving me some suga baby:lips:Originally posted by: mb
I sure as hell didn't grow on a tree.
*grabs mb's rape whistle*
Originally posted by: Kadarin
At my work they once started enforcing quotas to the point of deleting mails to save space. When this happened, we had some very high profile senior architects complain very loudly, and IT backed down.
Originally posted by: Descartes
I have no idea how much I use and I don't care. If I get hassled about my mailbox size we're going to have problems. As it is, I guess I'm lucky that I don't have to ask for permission.
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Descartes
I have no idea how much I use and I don't care. If I get hassled about my mailbox size we're going to have problems. As it is, I guess I'm lucky that I don't have to ask for permission.
Limiting mailbox size is a productivity killer. Like I said - storage is cheap and the productivity gains far outweigh the cost.
Originally posted by: Goosemaster
As if I don't have better things to do...and forget about a quota....they'd crucify me.
btw on average we are talking 5GB+ a piece here...
urgh.....need to ge an archiver...er...need to get funding to get an archiver:|
Originally posted by: Goosemaster
Originally posted by: ultimatebob
5 GB?!? Wow. Most places block the sending of outgoing mail if you go over 200 MB!
I used to work at a place that had a 25MB quota. What a rotten thing that policy was.
Originally posted by: TallBill
Originally posted by: Goosemaster
Originally posted by: ultimatebob
5 GB?!? Wow. Most places block the sending of outgoing mail if you go over 200 MB!
I used to work at a place that had a 25MB quota. What a rotten thing that policy was.
Yeah, mines 25. You end up hitting your max, deleting everything and starting fresh. Several times I've been looking for an old correspondence to find that I deleted it. Oh well, shoulda gave me a bigger box.
Originally posted by: Blackjack200
Originally posted by: TallBill
Originally posted by: Goosemaster
Originally posted by: ultimatebob
5 GB?!? Wow. Most places block the sending of outgoing mail if you go over 200 MB!
I used to work at a place that had a 25MB quota. What a rotten thing that policy was.
Yeah, mines 25. You end up hitting your max, deleting everything and starting fresh. Several times I've been looking for an old correspondence to find that I deleted it. Oh well, shoulda gave me a bigger box.
We have a 1 gb limit on our .pst file. I find that that's good for about 6 months worth of archives. When I run over the limit, I go in and delete the oldest emails until I'm back under. I can't take the time to sift through thousands of emails and figure out which ones might be important.
Last month we found out that our company was getting sued (no big deal, it's fairly common in my industry), our office of general counsel sent lawyers to talk to us and they told us not to delete any e-mails related to XXX lawsuit. Then they asked if any of us had received emails that would be considered relevant. I told them that I had, but I deleted them because the company forced me to.
That a tightly regulated, highly scrutinized company would force it's employees to delete emails just blows my mind. Penny wise and pound foolish.
Originally posted by: Kelvrick
Users learn fast when they stop getting their emails.
Originally posted by: IcebergSlim
its your job to give a business justification for setting IT policies. do your job.
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Descartes
I have no idea how much I use and I don't care. If I get hassled about my mailbox size we're going to have problems. As it is, I guess I'm lucky that I don't have to ask for permission.
Limiting mailbox size is a productivity killer. Like I said - storage is cheap and the productivity gains far outweigh the cost.
Originally posted by: Goosemaster
Originally posted by: IcebergSlim
its your job to give a business justification for setting IT policies. do your job.
technically it is not my job at all but that is exactly what I do.
Most of what I do (<90%) is not part of my job description
<--focused on policy
