Gmail: Difference between revisions
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While Gmail is not entirely open to the general public yet, most Gmail users have many invites to spare, as Google has lately been giving quite a few of these out. Gmail invites are also given away at random through Google's home page. |
While Gmail is not entirely open to the general public yet, most Gmail users have many invites to spare, as Google has lately been giving quite a few of these out. Gmail invites are also given away at random through Google's home page. |
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The service is notable for providing over 2.2 [[gigabytes]] of storage space—an increase from the former limit of 1 [[gigabyte]]. This change was announced on [[April Fool's Day 2005]], and was made for the one-year [[anniversary]] of Gmail. |
The service is notable for providing over 2.2 [[gigabytes]] of storage space—an increase from the former limit of 1 [[gigabyte]]. This change was announced on [[April Fool's Day 2005]], and was made for the one-year [[anniversary]] of Gmail. This number continues increasing, and all Google will say is that it will keep increasing by the second as long as they have enough space on their servers. Gmail makes intensive use of modern browser features such as [[JavaScript]] and keyboard access keys, allowing for a richer user experience, while retaining the benefits of a web application (most importantly, immediate availability of the service on any computer with a supported browser). |
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[[Image:Gmail_inbox.png|thumb|right|260px|'''Gmail inbox'''<br/>The main inbox view, as rendered by the [[Mozilla Firefox]] browser. Rather than showing individual emails, Gmail groups emails into threads, with the number of messages in each indicated by a bracketed number. In this image, one thread, shown with a white background and bolded text, has an unread message.]] |
[[Image:Gmail_inbox.png|thumb|right|260px|'''Gmail inbox'''<br/>The main inbox view, as rendered by the [[Mozilla Firefox]] browser. Rather than showing individual emails, Gmail groups emails into threads, with the number of messages in each indicated by a bracketed number. In this image, one thread, shown with a white background and bolded text, has an unread message.]] |
Revision as of 22:26, 15 May 2005
- For the Norwegian email systems vendor, see GMail (X.400 vendor).
Gmail is a free webmail service, currently in beta testing, created by Google.
For more than a year after Gmail's initial release on March 31, 2004, access to the service was restricted to those who had received an invitation token from an existing account holder.
While Gmail is not entirely open to the general public yet, most Gmail users have many invites to spare, as Google has lately been giving quite a few of these out. Gmail invites are also given away at random through Google's home page.
The service is notable for providing over 2.2 gigabytes of storage space—an increase from the former limit of 1 gigabyte. This change was announced on April Fool's Day 2005, and was made for the one-year anniversary of Gmail. This number continues increasing, and all Google will say is that it will keep increasing by the second as long as they have enough space on their servers. Gmail makes intensive use of modern browser features such as JavaScript and keyboard access keys, allowing for a richer user experience, while retaining the benefits of a web application (most importantly, immediate availability of the service on any computer with a supported browser).
Features
Gmail includes a number of original features as well as improvements upon those standard to web mail services.
Conversation views
Among the main innovations of Gmail is its method of categorizing e-mails, which Google calls Conversation View. In contrast to other e-mail clients, Gmail keeps track of individual "conversations" (an original message, along with all the replies to that message), and allows users to easily view all the e-mails related to a specific message. Gmail's algorithm for determining how conversations fit together is not perfect, however: Single conversations sometimes become fragmented (especially when a replier changes the e-mail's subject line) and unrelated conversations occasionally become attached together.
Filtering
Filters can be run on incoming mail by using an interface similar to the Search Options dialog (see searching below). Gmail allows users to filter messages by their text; their From, To, and Subject fields; and by whether or not the message has an attachment. Gmail can perform any combination of the following actions upon a message that meets a label's criteria: Archiving (i.e. removing the message from the Inbox), marking as "starred", applying a label, moving to the trash, and forwarding to another email address.
Two gigabytes of storage
Beginning on April 1st, 2005 (Gmail's first birthday), Gmail offers more than 2 gigabytes of email storage space. This figure and the original offering of 1000 megabytes are hundreds of times more than what other webmail services offered at the time of Gmail's original announcement in 2004. Google suggests that users "archive", rather than delete their messages; Gmail's 2 gigabyte of storage is sufficient to hold many years' worth of an average user's e-mails, and Gmail's search technology allows users to search their archives easily. Additionally, users can store files (up to 10 megabytes in size) as e-mail attachments.
The current rate of increase is one megabyte every 7.44 hours.
Fast interface
Gmail's interface relies heavily upon JavaScript, a client-side scripting language, which requests data from the Gmail servers via XMLHttpRequest, an example of the web-development technique referred to as AJAX. Since much processing takes place on the user's computer, relatively little information must be transferred between Gmail's web servers and the client, and the interface runs very quickly, even over a dial-up connection.
In late February 2005, Google rolled out a "Plain HTML" Gmail interface, accessible from any HTTP 1.1-compliant web browser (previously, Gmail was only accessible via a few modern browsers). The HTML interface does not use JavaScript, and is much slower than the standard interface.
Spell checker
Gmail provides an interactive spell checker. In the Gmail spell checker, one can select the spell check mode while composing a message. In the spell check mode misspelled words appear in place and can be replaced in any order. In this regard, the spell checker is different from a web-based iterative spell checker, which usually go through each spelling error one at a time, and different from a batch spell checker, which lists all misspelled words at once.
HTML email composition
As of early April 2005, Gmail users may compose e-mails with "rich formatting." This feature is only available to users using the JavaScript-enhanced version of Gmail (via Internet Explorer 5.5+, Mozilla/Mozilla Firefox, or Safari). Previously, all e-mails were sent in plain text.
Keyboard shortcuts
Gmail allows users to use their keyboard, rather than their mouse, to navigate its interface. This feature is not enabled by default.
Labels instead of folders
Gmail allows users to categorize their e-mails with "labels." Labels give users a flexible method of categorizing e-mails, since an e-mail may have any number of labels (in contrast to a system in which an e-mail may belong to only one folder). Users can display all e-mails having a particular label and can use labels as a search criterion. Gmail also allows users to set up filters which label incoming e-mail automatically.
Searching
Gmail allows users to search by a number of criteria:
- whether the message "has" or "doesn't have" a certain phrase
- the message's From, To and Subject fields
- the message's location (All Mail, Inbox, Starred, Sent Mail, Spam, Trash, All & Spam & Trash, Read Mail, Unread Mail, or a label)
- whether the message has an attachment
- the message's date within a given range (e.g. all messages received within one week of January 1, 2004)
Gmail also allows users to construct advanced search strings. For example, the following search string would search for all e-mails from bob to alex with the subject field containing "work" or "school" but not "friend," labeled as archive, with a PDF attachment, and with a carbon copy to self, limited to the date range between May 1, 2004 and June 1, 2004, that are not starred:
- from:bob to:alex subject:(work OR school -friend) label:archive has:attachment filename:pdf in:unstarred cc:self after:2004/05/01 before:2004/06/01
- (Note that logical operators (e.g. OR, AND) must be in upper-case)
See also: How do I use Gmail's advanced search?
Spam filtering
Gmail offers a spam filtering system. Independent tests conducted in May 2004 showed this spam filter to be about 60% accurate for a wide variety of spam, significantly lower than the spam filtering accuracy of Yahoo! and Hotmail. In December 2004, however, unscientific tests suggested that Gmail's accuracy was much higher than it was in May. Messages marked as spam are automatically deleted after 30 days.
Email signing
Gmail is the first major provider to sign outgoing mails with Yahoo!'s DomainKeys signatures.
POP3 access
Although not offered with the original release, Gmail allows all users to send and receive their e-mail via POP3 (over SSL) and SMTP. Some users have experienced authentication difficulties when trying to gain access to their accounts and have blamed Google for the problem, but this is likely because the user must activate a setting within Gmail before it will allow POP access, not because Gmail has a technical problem. However, some users continue to experience authentication problems in spite of the activation of this setting.
Rich Text Formatting
A feature added to Gmail on its 1st birthday, Rich Text Formatting allows users to change the size and font of text, change the color and highlited color of text, and do alignment, bullet points, and numbered lists, in addition to several other features. Rich Text Formatting is currently only able to work on browsers that support WYSIWYG, such as Mozilla Firefox. Unfortunately, browsers that don't support WYSIWYG such as Apple's Safari cannot take advantage of this feature.
Username handling
Gmail usernames must be between 6 and 30 characters (inclusive) and made up of only letters, numbers, and periods (.). Experimentation has shown that Gmail ignores periods when resolving addresses. That is, the account google@gmail.com receives mail sent to goo.gle@gmail.com, g.o.o.g.l.e@gmail.com, etc. Likewise, the account goo.gle@gmail.com receives mail from google@gmail.com.. However, when signing in it is necessary to include periods.
Gmail recently blocked users from creating addresses that vary by periods only perhaps to prevent account breaches. Consider that two different people with the addresses john.doe@gmail.com and johndoe@gmail.com who will each receive all emails intended for any one of the accounts. The ability to create new such addresses is now blocked. However, it remains to be seen how Google will resolve the collisions of such addresses.
Plus-addressing
Gmail also supports "plus-addressing" of emails. Messages can be sent to addresses in the form: gmail.user+extratext@gmail.com where extratext can be any string. Plus-addressing allows users to sign up for different services with different aliases and then easily filter all e-mails from those services. Plus-addressing even works when sending email from a Gmail account to itself. Additionally (in some cases) the string appended to the e-mail address may not be longer than six characters; if it is longer, Gmail shortens it.
Gmail Notifier
The Gmail Notifier, an official tool offered by Google, displays a small icon in the bottom right corner of the screen in Microsoft Windows (system tray area), indicating the presence of new mail in one's inbox. It also has a feature that makes Gmail the default mail client for mailto links. It does not, however, download new messages, and the program only works with Windows 2000, XP, or more current Microsoft operating systems.
Available to those who surf with Mozilla Firefox is the identically named Gmail Notifier extension, first appeared around July 8, 2004 [1], which is more than one month before the official one (August 21, 2004).
Multi language support
The Gmail interface currently supports 12 languages in addition to US English: Dutch, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Russian, simplified and traditional Chinese, and UK English.
Privacy
There has been a great deal of criticism regarding Gmail's privacy policy.[2] Much of the controversy involved the clause "residual copies of email may remain on our systems for some time, even after you have deleted messages from your mailbox or after the termination of your account." Many believed that this meant that Google would intentionally archive copies of deleted mail forever. Google later stated that they will "make reasonable efforts to remove deleted information from our systems as quickly as is practical."
Most of the criticism, however, was against Google's plans to add context-sensitive advertisements to e-mails by automatically scanning them. Privacy advocates raised concerns that the plan involved scanning their personal, assumed private, e-mails, and that this was a security problem. However, opponents of this view state that when your e-mail is checked to see if it is spam, it is being scanned by the same process. Because a human is not reading the message, they say, it is not a problem.
Perhaps the most severe privacy issue plaguing gmail so far is a result of their not-so-famous address error correction and the way they handle usernames. Surprisingly, this problem draws little or no criticism at all. For more information about this problem see the topic Username handling above.
Limitations
The conversation view groups related messages in a linear stack, which can be expanded and collapsed. While this does provide an innovative view of an email thread, it does not provide any way to differentiate messages that branch off from the original thread. This can occur when mail is sent to multiple recipients who respond individually.
The following features are absent from Gmail, but are offered by Gmail's main competitors, Yahoo! Mail and Hotmail, some for a price:
- The ability to search within text message attachments.
- The ability to import mail from external POP3 servers into the webmail account.
- WAP access.
Google is hesitant to release any upcoming plans for the implementation of any of these features. The Gmail Team has said in e-mails to questions that future features will include the option to export contacts.
Development
Gmail was announced amid a flurry of rumor. Owing to April Fool's Day, however, the company's press release was greeted with skepticism in the technology world, especially since Google already had been known to make April Fool's Jokes (such as PigeonRank). However, they explained that their real joke had been a press release saying that they would take offshoring to the extreme by putting employees in a "Google Copernicus Center" on the Moon ([3]). Jonathan Rosenberg, Google's vice-president of products, was quoted by BBC News as saying, "We are very serious about Gmail."
Gmail also initially received a lot of criticism for a statement they made in their original terms of use, refusing to guarantee that all e-mails at Gmail would be deleted upon request by the user. Google later clarified that they were referring to backup copies of emails, and promised that all deleted mails would eventually be expunged completely from their servers. This, along with the feature that advertisements would be generated by software-based scanning of e-mails in order to better target them, gave rise to a controversy on web privacy (see [4] and [5]).
Before being acquired by Google, the gmail.com domain name was used by the free email service offered by Garfield.com, online home of the comic strip Garfield. This free email service has moved to e-garfield.com.
Beta testing phase
Google initially invited about 1,000 employees, friends, and family members to become beta testers. The trials began on March 21, 2004. Since then, others have been randomly selected to test the service. On April 25, active users from the Blogger.com community were offered the chance to participate in the beta-testing. Since then, active members have periodically received "invites" which they can extend to their friends. One round was sent out on May 1, and another three invitations were given to all active members on June 1; in mid-June, the number of invitations has been increasing, with many users receiving between three and five invites daily. On February 2, 2005, the invitation interface was changed to make it easier to give invites by simply entering an email address and at approximately 3:00 UTC on February 3, 2005, some Gmail users were rewarded with 50 invites, suggesting the possibility that Gmail is soon to go public. Again, on February 16, some additional Gmail users received 50 invites, regardless of previous amount.
During the initial months of the Gmail beta, Gmail's well-publicized feature set and the exclusive nature of the accounts caused the aftermarket price of Gmail invitations to skyrocket. According to PC World magazine, Gmail invitations were selling on eBay for as much as US$150, with some specific accounts being sold for several thousand dollars. After a new round of invitations in early June, the price for invitations fell down to between US$2-$5. Several philanthropic Gmail users have utilized services such as the now defunct GmailSwap to donate invitations to people who want them. On June 28, Google amended its policy to forbid the selling of registered accounts [6].
Some beta-testers have put up an account of their experiences on the web; see [7] and [8].
Current status
In March 2004, Google said that Gmail would probably be publicly released after six months of testing, which would have placed their launch in September 2004, but it was still in beta as of May 2005. Speculation also regarding the release date is rife after The New York Times said they had "credible sources" saying "Gmail will be released publicly by the end of the year." As of today, however, an invitation from an existing user is still required in order to make a new account, and the site still says it is in the beta development stage. The number of invitations existing account holders can send has been varied, presumably to control the usage and growth of the system. For all intents and purposes, Gmail is essentially open to the public now, since thousands of invites are publically available at the Isnoop.net Gmail Invite Spooler, the Gmail Queue , the Automatic Gmail Invite Giver-Awayer, and FreeGmailInvites.com. There is speculation that Google will continue to provide Gmail accounts only on an invite basis. This will help prevent spammers from registering numerous accounts for purposes of spamming, and will ensure that any account used illegally will have another valid email address to trace a user (the one to which the invite was sent).
In January 2005, security experts discovered a critical flaw in the handling of Gmail messages that would allow hackers to easily access private e-mails from any Gmail user's account. This was posted with detailed information to popular technology site Slashdot at 9:23 a.m. PST on January 12, 2005. At roughly 10:15 a.m. PST on January 13, 2005, developers at Gmail announced that they had fixed the problem, and that the security flaw had been patched. Despite Gmail's status as a beta application, this raised concerns among some users who use Gmail as their primary mail account.
On April 1, 2005, exactly one year after the initial release, Gmail increased the mailbox size to 2 GB (advertising it as 2GB plus) and introduced some other new features, including formatted editing (giving users the option of sending messages in HTML or plain text). As of May 2005, the mailbox size is 2.2 GB, and is increasing each day at a rate which would add up to roughly 1 GB per year.
On April 13, 2005, Gmail became available in several international languages: British English, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish, Russian and simplified and traditional Chinese. Invites are still required for registering.
Competition
Due to the heavy media coverage of Gmail's initial announcement and development, many existing web mail services quickly increased their storage capacity. This was seen as a move to stop existing users from switching to Gmail, and to capitalize on the newly rekindled public interest in web mail services. See Webmail for a list of these services.
See also
External links
- Gmail
- A feed of your inbox in Atom format.
- Gmail Resource
- Gmail Tips
- O'Reilly on Gmail Hacks
- Screenshots and Primer
- Feature Overview and Comparison Article
- Interview with Sergey Brin about the future of Gmail
- Petition requesting IMAP for Gmail
- A NY Times article on Yahoo! Mail's response to Gmail
- Article from the Guardian Website
- Article from MSNBC
- Gmail Wiki is a MediaWiki-powered Wiki about Gmail
- Gmail4Troops A website that sets up men and women overseas with Gmail Invites as a means of keeping in touch with home.
Gmail tools
- Gmail tools and plugins
- How to use Gmail as a second brain - Article on how to use Gmail for data and information storage and management.
- Gmail Notifier - Official Gmail Notifier program. Sits in system tray and checks email, shows snippets, and associates mailto: links (BETA).
- G-Mailto - Associate mailto: email links on the web with Gmail.
- WebMailCompose - Mozilla Extension to associate mailto: email links with GMail (among other webmail services.)
- Google Mail Loader - Helps import your existing email into Gmail.
- GTransfer - Service that transfers e-mails from other webmail services to Gmail
- libgmail is a Python API for writing programs that use Gmail
- GmailFS provides a mountable Linux filesystem using libgmail and FUSE
- Gmail Drive provides a mountable Win32 filesystem using MS Windows
- GmailHost provides an additional front-end for Gmail Drive that allows your files to be accessed online
- GTray - A simple Gmail notification tool.
- Gmail Agent API - Mail-notifier & address-importer.
- GetMail - Forward your Hotmail or MSN emails to your Gmail account.
- Mail::Webmail::Gmail - Perl module interface to Gmail.
- GMNotifier - An unofficial Gmail Notifier program written in the .NET framework
- GMail API for Java(g4j) - A Java-based API for Gmail.
- GmailStatus GMail Notifier program for Mac OS X 10.3.x
- POP3 server for Gmail(Java) - Gavamail aims to implement a POP3/IMAP server for Gmail. Currently a POP3 server has been implemented.
- Goollery - Gmail-based photo gallery, allowing one to upload pictures from a website; the pictures are automatically stored in one's gmail account.
- GMail Wireless - Allows one access to one's Gmail account using a wireless WAP phone
FAQs
Blogs
- Gmail Resource Blog Actual blog of the Gmail Resource Gmail news.
- Aimlesswords.com Gmail blog that is updated regularly.
- JustinBlanton.com Getting the most out of Gmail.
- GmailGems
Forums and discussion groups
- Google Community Gmail Forum
- GoogleGmails Forum (Unofficial Gmail forum)
- GmailForums.com (Unofficial Gmail forum)
- More Gmail Forums
- Gmail Lounge
- Gmail Generation (Unaffiliated Google Group)
Invitations
- G-Queue - A website that queues and distributes people's requests for a Gmail account. Automated distribution service that also accepts donation. All Gmail invite codes donated to gqueue.spool@gmail.com are automatically stored and made available on website.
- Gmail Invites - Yet another queue for gmail invites. Invites can be send to gmail@swal.org
- GmailSpooler - A website that spools people's requests and donations of gmail accounts
- A PC World article on the sale of Gmail invitations in the first months of the Beta
- Gmail afraid A waiting-list that distributes Gmail invitations by email.
- Pentapenguin.com A discussion forum that provides invites for free.
- Gmail Help Discussion A forum (or group) for help.
- Gmail invites spooler
- Free G Mail Invites
Privacy concerns and legislation
- Discussion of Privacy Concerns
- Extensive FAQ at the Electronic Privacy Information Center
- Gmail is too creepy - Site critical of the service
- Proposed bill that would forbid Google from scanning e-mails, by Senator Liz Figueroa
- Californian senators have approved a bill restricting Gmail
- Gmail Exchange
- Article on a Gmail security vulnerability
- Gmail Messages Are Vulnerable To Interception from Slashdot (January 12, 2005)
Spam filter
- An active Gmail spam filter testing site
- SpamCentral@Gmail.com Testing site looking for commercial offers with trigger words that Gmail "should" recognize as spam
- An independent study comparing Gmail's spam filter to Spam Assassin