Here is a gmail search query that would do this:

to:(dev@arrow.apache.org) subject:([jira]) -Rust
On Wed, Nov 21, 2018 at 10:34 AM Wes McKinney <wesmck...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> hey Andy,
>
> A lot of us use gmail.
>
> On the mailing list, we have two main kinds of e-mails:
>
> * Discussions written directly be people
> * New issue notifications
>
> The new issue notifications have titles like "[jira] [Created]
> (ARROW-2653) [C++] Refactor hash table support". See
> https://lists.apache.org/list.html?dev@arrow.apache.org
>
> If you want to see discussions in your inbox, but not new issues, the
> easiest thing is to create a filter for dev@arrow.apache.org and use
> the "[jira]" tag to select e-mails to put into a folder, skipping the
> inbox. In your case, since you work on Rust, you could add an
> exception to not filter if "[Rust]" is in the title so you see all
> those issues. That's part of why I'm diligent about adding tags to the
> titles of issues.
>
> - Wes
> On Wed, Nov 21, 2018 at 10:27 AM Andy Grove <andygrov...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > I have a somewhat related question. I currently use gmail as my email
> > client and it works OK overall, but it's pretty horrible for following this
> > mailing list. I was curious what email clients others here use.
> >
> > Thanks,
> >
> > Andy.
> >
> > On Wed, Nov 21, 2018 at 3:58 AM Maximilian Michels <m...@apache.org> wrote:
> >
> > > Hi!
> > >
> > > Do you think it would make sense to send JIRA notifications to a
> > > separate mailing list? Some people just want to casually follow the
> > > mailing list and it requires a filter to delete all the JIRA spam.
> > >
> > > I see there is already an "issues" mailing list which receives the JIRA
> > > notifications: https://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/arrow-issues/
> > >
> > > What do you think?
> > >
> > > Thanks,
> > > Max
> > >

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