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You've got (specific) mail...

One of the things I’ve always liked about Apple’s Mail application is that when new messages arrive, Mail’s Dock icon tells you how many:

Mail’s Dock icon

However, one limitation of this feature is that the number displayed includes only those messages in your Inbox; if you’ve got a number of Mail Rules set up to automatically file messages into folders—or if you’ve manually move messages to other folders but kept their status as “Unread"—Mail’s Dock icon no longer counts those messages. Because of this limitation, back in June of 2004 I recommended MailEnhancer 1.11 as a useful add-on to Mail that (among other things) changes the Dock’s status icon so that it reflects all unread messages in all folders.

But now I’ve found something even more useful: Ecamm Network’s $8 DockStar 1.0 ( ). This nifty Mail add-on not only lets you decide exactly which unread messages are “counted” by Mail’s icon, but lets you have multiple indicators, as well. For example, you can use one indicator to tell you how many unread messages you have in total, another to tell you how many of those messages are from your work account, and another to display how many personal messages are unread. That may sound confusing in text, but it’s actually quite easy to use.

DockStar Mail icon

After installing DockStar—it’s a Mac OS X Input Manager Plugin, located in /Library/InputManagers—a new settings panel appears in Mail’s own Preferences dialog:

DockStar preferences

The example Mail icon on the left of the dialog displays the current indicators (which Ecamm calls “badges”); on the right are pop-up menus from which you can choose the “target” of each badge—which of your mail inboxes or folders it monitors. You can choose any inbox or folder, including Smart Folders; for example, I’ve got badge #2 set up to monitor a Smart Folder that includes messages with “High” priority. If you’ve got multiple mail accounts, you can even monitor each account’s inbox; for example, in the screenshot above, badge #3 is monitoring the “communal” inbox (all inboxes combined), whereas badge #5 displays only those unread messages in my .Mac inbox. You can also disable particular badges—if you don’t need all five indicators, you can choose “None” from any badge’s pop-up menu to disable it completely.

(Here’s a tip that I use: Set up one of your badges to monitor your Drafts folder; that way you always know if you’ve got draft messages waiting to be completed.)

To make it easier to differentiate between indicators, DockStar also lets you choose the color, shape, and size of each. By “turning” the dial next to a badge pop-up menu, you cycle through available colors. By clicking on a badge on the example Mail icon, you cycle through available shapes. Finally, by click-dragging a badge in the sample icon, you can make it smaller or larger.

DockStar badge resize

Granted, if you don’t use Dock magnification and your Dock is getting crowded (and, therefore, has smaller icons), DockStar’s display may be difficult to read. But apart from this limitation, I’m finding DockStar to be a real productivity enhancer—with a quick glance I can see not only if I’ve got new mail, but whether or not it’s mail I need to get to right away.

DockStar requires Mac OS X 10.2.8 or higher.

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