💾 Archived View for ew.srht.site › en › 2020 › 20201227-deleting-old-email.gmi captured on 2024-08-18 at 17:21:34. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
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Alex Schröder reminds us:
Data parsimony demands that we don’t collect the data we don’t need; that we don’t store the data we collect; that we don’t keep the data we store. Delete that shit!
gemini://alexschroeder.ch/page/2020-12-22_Crawling
So today I went ahead and removed 5 old mailboxes in odd formats. Nowadays I use emacs/mu4e and I did not feel inclined to import the old stuff. I did search for and find two text documents from 2001, which I moved into the Archive directory, something like my personal timeline.
But before calling rm I decided to have some fun with them mail boxes. Using a few shell commands I found this:
No, I did not look at them. I did not waste countless hours trying to freshen my memories about things long forgotten. I will admit that I pulled an email address from these files a few weeks back, but it was not really important or a live saver. I did send a message to that email address, however, and I got a nice reply, too!
So, on to the 37000 emails in my current mailbox? Hmm. Maybe I should archive this stuff once a year and start over. Just wondering ...
$ find Maildir/ -type f | xargs grep -h '^Date: ' | sed 's/^Date: //' | dateutils.dconv -i "%a, %d %b %Y" -i "%d %b %Y" -f ymd 2>/dev/null | sed 's/-..-..$//' | sort | uniq -c 108 2004 455 2005 344 2006 ... 3843 2018 3529 2019 4485 2020
So I deleted 100 MiB and kept 2700 MiB --- oh my!
Cheers,
~ew