microsoft word - gmail - copy
TRANSCRIPT
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GmailFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about Google's email service. For other uses, seeGmail (disambiguation).
Gmail
A screenshot of a Gmail inbox
Developer(s) Google
Initial release March 21, 2004
Operating system Server: Linux Client: Any Web browser
Platform Google Web Toolkit (Java/JavaScript)
Type POP3, IMAP, E-mail, webmail
Website mail.google.com
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Gmail is a free, advertising-supported webmail, POP3, and IMAP service provided by Google.[1][2]
In
the United Kingdom andGermany it is officially called Google Mail.
Gmail was launched as an invitation-only beta release on April 1, 2004 and it became available to the
general public on February 7, 2007, though still with beta status. As of July 2009,[3]
it has 146 million users
monthly. The service was upgraded from beta status on July 7, 2009, along with the rest of the Google
Apps suite.[4][5]
With an initial storage capacity offer of 1 GB per user, Gmail significantly increased the webmail standard for
free storage from the 2 to 4MB its competitors offered at that time.
Gmail has a search-oriented interface and a "conversation view" similar to an Internet forum. Software
developers know Gmail for its pioneering use of the Ajax programming technique.
[6]
Gmail runs on Google Servlet Engine and Google GFE/1.3 which runs on Linux.[7][8][9]
Contents
[hide]
1 Features
o 1.1 Storage
o 1.2 Gmail Labs
o 1.3 Spam filtero 1.4 Gmail Mobile
2 Interface
3 History
4 Domain name
5 Requirement for mobile phone number
6 Gmail hoaxes
o 6.1 Gmail Paper hoax
o 6.2 Gmail Custom Time hoax
o 6.3 Gmail Autopilot hoax
7 Code changes
8 Criticisms
o 8.1 Privacy
o 8.2 Technical limitations
o 8.3 Outages
o 8.4 "On behalf of"
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o 8.5 Disabling accounts
9 Reception
o 9.1 Awards
10 Trademark disputes
o 10.1 Germany
o 10.2 Poland
o 10.3 Russian Federation
o 10.4 United Kingdom
o 10.5 United States
11 Competition
12 See also
o 12.1 3rd party software
13 References
14 External links
[edit]Features
[edit]Storage
Gmail's log-in page (July 2009)
The Gmail service currently provides more than 7400 MB of free storage.[10]
Users can rent additional
storage (shared between Picasa Web Albums and Gmail) from 20 GB (US$5/year) to 16 TB
(US$4096/year).[11][12][13][14]
On April 1, 2005 the first anniversary of Gmail, Google announced the increase from 1 GB, stating that
Google would "keep giving people more space forever."[15]
In April 2005 Gmail engineer Rob Siemborski stated that Google would keep increasing storage by the
second as long as it had enough space on its servers. On October 12, 2007 the rate of increase was 5.37
MB per hour.[16]
As of July 27, 2009, the rate was 0.000004 MB/s, or 0.0144 MB/hr[17]
[edit]Gmail Labs
The Gmail Labs feature, introduced on June 5, 2008, allows users to test new or experimental features of
Gmail, such as bookmarking of important e-mail messages, custom keyboard-shortcuts and games.
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Users can enable or disable Labs features selectively and provide feedback about each of them. This allows
Gmail engineers to obtain user input about new features to improve them and also to assess their popularity
and whether they merit developing into regular Gmail features. All Labs features are experimental and are
subject to termination at any time.
On December 10, 2008 Gmail added support for SMS Messaging through its integrated Chat.[18][19][20]
On January 28, 2009 Gmail added support for offline access through its integration with Gears.[21]
On July 14, 2009 Gmail brought Tasks out of Labs testing and made it an official feature.[22]
[edit]Spam filter
Gmail's spam filtering features a community-driven system: when any user marks an email as spam, this
provides information to help the system identify similar future messages for all Gmail users.[23]
[edit]Gmail Mobile
Gmail Mobile is a version of Google's Gmail email service. It is a free service, developed to provide access
to Gmail from mobile devices such as cell phones, or smartphones. Gmail Mobile was released on
December 16, 2005 and is available in many different languages. Gmail Mobile offers many of the features
as Gmail delivered effectively to smaller, mobile screens. Users have the ability to compose, read, reply,
forward, mark unread, add a star or trash email messages.[citation needed]
On September 22, 2009 Google brought Push Mail support to its Gmail service using Google Sync
for iPhone and iPod Touch platforms, Symbian and Windows Mobile based devices.[24]
[edit]Interface
Main article:Gmail interface
The Gmail interface differs from other webmail systems with its focus on search and its "conversation view"
of email, grouping several replies onto a single page. Gmail's user experience designer, Kevin Fox, intended
users to feel as if they were always on one page and just changing things on that page, rather than having to
navigate to other places.[25]
[edit]HistoryMain article:History of Gmail
Gmail was a project started by Google developer Paul Buchheit several years before it was announced to
the public. Initially the e-mail client was available for use only by Google employees internally within the
company. Google announced Gmail to the public on April 1, 2004.[26]
[edit]Domain name
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Before its acquisition by Google, the gmail.com domain name was used by a free e-mail service offered by
Garfield.com, online home of the comic stripGarfield. After moving to a different domain, that service has
since been discontinued.[27]
As of 22 June 2005, Gmail's canonicalURI changed
from http://gmail.google.com/gmail/to http://mail.google.com/mail/.[28]
As of July 2009, those who typed in
the former URI were redirected to the latter.
The domain gmail.comis unavailable in certain countries due to trademark disputes, in which cases users
are able to use the domain googlemail.com. The Gmail service does not discriminate between these two
domains for incoming e-mails, therefore a user with the address "[email protected]" will receive
mail sent to "[email protected]", and vice-versa. Accordingly, users obliged to use
the googlemail.comdomain are unable to select addresses already chosen by gmail.comusers.
[edit]Requirement for mobile phone number
When attempting to create a Gmail account from some countries, Google requires a mobile
phonenumber that supports text messaging. In other countries this is not required for sign-up, according to
Google due to service limitations.[29]
Google explains this:
If you'd like to sign up for a Gmail address, you need to have a mobile phone that has text-messaging
capabilities.
If you don't have a phone, you may want to ask a friend if you can use his or her number to receive a
code.
One of the reasons we're offering this new way to sign up for Gmail is to help protect our users and
combat abuse. Spam and abuse protection are two things we take very seriously, and our users have been
very happy with the small amount of spam they've received in Gmail. We take many measures to ensure
that spammers have a difficult time sending their spam messages, getting these messages delivered, or
even obtaining a Gmail address (spammers will often use many different addresses to send spam).
Sending invitation codes to mobile phones is one way to address this, as the number of addresses created
per phone number can be limited.[29] [edit]Gmail hoaxes
See also:Google's hoaxes
[edit]Gmail Paper hoax
On April Fools' Day 2007, Google made fun of Gmail by introducing "Gmail Paper", where a user could click
a button and Gmail would purportedly mail an ad-supported hard copy for free.[30]
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[edit]Gmail Custom Time hoax
On April Fools' Day 2008 Google introduced a fake service, "Gmail Custom Time", which would allegedly
allow a user to send up to ten e-mails per year with forged timestamps. The hoax stated that by bending
spacetime on the Google servers, the e-mails actually get routed through the fourth dimension of time itself
before reaching their intended recipient.[31][32]
[edit]Gmail Autopilot hoax
On April Fools' Day 2009 Google introduced a service called Gmail Autopilot by CADIE.[33]
According to
Google, the service purported to automatically read and respond to emails for the user. It appeared to work
by analyzing messages for the emotions expressed in the message and either providing advice to the user
or automatically responding to the message.
[edit]Code changes
Gmail's JavaScript front-end was rewritten in late summer and early fall of 2007 and was released to users
starting on October 29, 2007. The new version had a redesigned contacts section, quick contacts box and
chat popups, which were added to names in the message list as well as the contact list. The contacts
application is integrated into other Google services, such as Google Docs. Users granted access to the new
version were given a link at the top-right corner which read "Newer Version". As of December 2007, most
new registrations in English (US) along with most pre-existing accounts are given the new interface by
default when supported. There remains the option to downgrade via a link labelled "Older
Version".[34][35][36][37]
These coding changes mean that only users of Internet Explorer 7, Firefox 2, Google Chrome and Safari
3.0 (or more recent versions) can fully use the new code. Internet Explorer 5.5+, Netscape 7.1+, Mozilla
1.4+, Firefox 0.8, Safari 1.3 and some other browsers will give limited functionality. Other browsers may be
redirected to the basic-HTML-only version of Gmail.[36][38][39][40][41]
During the week of January 18, 2008 Google released an update that changed the way Gmail loads
JavaScript. This caused the failure of some third-party extensions.[42]
On December 12, 2008 Gmail added support for faster PDF viewing within the browser.[43]
[edit]Criticisms
[edit]Privacy
Google automatically scans e-mails to add context-sensitive advertisements to them. Privacy advocates
raised concerns that the plan involved scanning their personal, assumed private, e-mails, and that this was a
security problem. Allowing e-mail content to be read, even by a computer, raises the risk that the expectation
of privacy in e-mail will be reduced. Furthermore, e-mail that non-subscribers choose to send to Gmail
accounts is scanned by Gmail as well, even though those senders never agreed to Gmail's terms of service
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or privacy policy. Google can change its privacy policy unilaterally and Google is technically able to cross-
reference cookies across its information-rich product line to make dossiers on individuals. However, most e-
mail systems make use of server-side content scanning in order to check for spam.[44][45]
Privacy advocates also regard the lack of disclosed data retention and correlation policies as problematic.
Google has the ability to combine information contained in a person's e-mail messages with information from
Internet searches. Google has not confirmed how long such information is kept or how it can be used. One
of the concerns is ......
GmailFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about Google's email service. For other uses, seeGmail (disambiguation).
Gmail
A screenshot of a Gmail inbox
Developer(s) Google
Initial release March 21, 2004
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Operating system Server: Linux Client: Any Web browser
Platform Google Web Toolkit (Java/JavaScript)
Type POP3, IMAP, E-mail, webmail
Website mail.google.com
Gmail is a free, advertising-supported webmail, POP3, and IMAP service provided by Google.[1][2]
In
the United Kingdom andGermany it is officially called Google Mail.
Gmail was launched as an invitation-only beta release on April 1, 2004 and it became available to the
general public on February 7, 2007, though still with beta status. As of July 2009,[3]
it has 146 million users
monthly. The service was upgraded from beta status on July 7, 2009, along with the rest of the Google
Apps suite.[4][5]
With an initial storage capacity offer of 1 GB per user, Gmail significantly increased the webmail standard for
free storage from the 2 to 4MB its competitors offered at that time.
Gmail has a search-oriented interface and a "conversation view" similar to an Internet forum. Software
developers know Gmail for its pioneering use of the Ajax programming technique.[6]
Gmail runs on Google Servlet Engine and Google GFE/1.3 which runs on Linux.[7][8][9]
Contents
[hide]
1 Features
o 1.1 Storage
o 1.2 Gmail Labs
o 1.3 Spam filter
o 1.4 Gmail Mobile
2 Interface
3 History
4 Domain name
5 Requirement for mobile phone number
6 Gmail hoaxes
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o 6.1 Gmail Paper hoax
o 6.2 Gmail Custom Time hoax
o 6.3 Gmail Autopilot hoax
7 Code changes
8 Criticisms
o 8.1 Privacy
o 8.2 Technical limitations
o 8.3 Outages
o 8.4 "On behalf of"
o
8.5 Disabling accounts
9 Reception
o 9.1 Awards
10 Trademark disputes
o 10.1 Germany
o 10.2 Poland
o 10.3 Russian Federation
o 10.4 United Kingdom
o 10.5 United States
11 Competition
12 See also
o 12.1 3rd party software
13 References
14 External links
Contents
[hide]
1 Features
o 1.1 Storage
o 1.2 Gmail Labs
o 1.3 Spam filter
o 1.4 Gmail Mobile
2 Interface
3 History
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4 Domain name
5 Requirement for mobile phone number
6 Gmail hoaxes
o 6.1 Gmail Paper hoax
o 6.2 Gmail Custom Time hoax
o 6.3 Gmail Autopilot hoax
7 Code changes
8 Criticisms
o 8.1 Privacy
o 8.2 Technical limitations
o 8.3 Outages
o 8.4 "On behalf of"
o 8.5 Disabling accounts
9 Reception
o 9.1 Awards
10 Trademark disputes
o 10.1 Germany
o10.2 Poland
o 10.3 Russian Federation
o 10.4 United Kingdom
o 10.5 United States
11 Competition
12 See also
o 12.1 3rd party software
13 References
14 External links
[edit]Features
[edit]Storage
Gmail's log-in page (July 2009)
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The Gmail service currently provides more than 7400 MB of free storage.[10]
Users can rent additional
storage (shared between Picasa Web Albums and Gmail) from 20 GB (US$5/year) to 16 TB
(US$4096/year).[11][12][13][14]
On April 1, 2005 the first anniversary of Gmail, Google announced the increase from 1 GB, stating that
Google would "keep giving people more space forever."[15]
In April 2005 Gmail engineer Rob Siemborski stated that Google would keep increasing storage by the
second as long as it had enough space on its servers. On October 12, 2007 the rate of increase was 5.37
MB per hour.[16]
As of July 27, 2009, the rate was 0.000004 MB/s, or 0.0144 MB/hr[17]
[edit]Gmail Labs
The Gmail Labs feature, introduced on June 5, 2008, allows users to test new or experimental features ofGmail, such as bookmarking of important e-mail messages, custom keyboard-shortcuts and games.
Users can enable or disable Labs features selectively and provide feedback about each of them. This allows
Gmail engineers to obtain user input about new features to improve them and also to assess their popularity
and whetherthey merit developing into regular Gmail features. All Labs features are experimental and are
subject to termination at any time.
On December 10, 2008 Gmail added support for SMS Messaging through its integrated Chat.[18][19][20]
On January 28, 2009 Gmail added support for offline access through its integration with Gears.[21]
On July 14, 2009 Gmail brought Tasks out of Labs testing and made it an official feature.[22]
[edit]Spam filter
Gmail's spam filtering features a community-driven system: when any user marks an email as spam, this
provides information to help the system identify similar future messages for all Gmail users.[23]
[edit]Gmail Mobile
Gmail Mobile is a version of Google's Gmail email service. It is a free service, developed to provide access
to Gmail from mobile devices such as cell phones, or smartphones. Gmail Mobile was released on
December 16, 2005 and is available in many different languages. Gmail Mobile offers many of the features
as Gmail delivered effectively to smaller, mobile screens. Users have the ability to compose, read, reply,
forward, mark unread, add a star or trash email messages.[citation needed]
On September 22, 2009 Google brought Push Mail support to its Gmail service using Google Sync
for iPhone and iPod Touch platforms, Symbian and Windows Mobile based devices.[24]
[edit]Interface
Main article:Gmail interface
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The Gmail interface differs from other webmail systems with its focus on search and its "conversation view"
of email, grouping several replies onto a single page. Gmail's user experience designer, Kevin Fox, intended
users to feel as if they were always on one page and just changing things on that page, rather than having to
navigate to other places.[25]
[edit]History
Main article:History of Gmail
Gmail was a project started by Google developer Paul Buchheit several years before it was announced to
the public. Initially the e-mail client was available for use only by Google employees internally within the
company. Google announced Gmail to the public on April 1, 2004.[26]
[edit]
Domain name
Before its acquisition by Google, the gmail.com domain name was used by a free e-mail service offered by
Garfield.com, online home of the comic stripGarfield. After moving to a different domain, that service has
since been discontinued.[27]
As of 22 June 2005, Gmail's canonicalURI changed
from http://gmail.google.com/gmail/to http://mail.google.com/mail/.[28]
As of July 2009, those who typed in
the former URI were redirected to the latter.
The domain gmail.comis unavailable in certain countries due to trademark disputes, in which cases users
are able to use the domain googlemail.com. The Gmail service does not discriminate between these two
domains for incoming e-mails, therefore a user with the address "[email protected]" will receive
mail sent to "[email protected]", and vice-versa. Accordingly, users obliged to use
the googlemail.comdomain are unable to select addresses already chosen by gmail.comusers.
[edit]Requirement for mobile phone number
When attempting to create a Gmail account from some countries, Google requires a mobile
phonenumber that supports text messaging. In other countries this is not required for sign-up, according to
Google due to service limitations.[29]
Google explains this:
If you'd like to sign up for a Gmail address, you need to have a mobile phone that has text-messagingcapabilities.
If you don't have a phone, you may want to ask a friend if you can use his or her number to receive a
code.
One of the reasons we're offering this new way to sign up for Gmail is to help protect our users and
combat abuse. Spam and abuse protection are two things we take very seriously, and our users have been
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very happy with the small amount of spam they've received in Gmail. We take many measures to ensure
that spammers have a difficult time sending their spam messages, getting these messages delivered, or
even obtaining a Gmail address (spammers will often use many different addresses to send spam).
Sending invitation codes to mobile phones is one way to address this, as the number of addresses created
per phone number can be limited.[29]
[edit]Gmail hoaxes
See also:Google's hoaxes
[edit]Gmail Paper hoax
On April Fools' Day 2007, Google made fun of Gmail by introducing "Gmail Paper", where a user could click
a button and Gmail would purportedly mail an ad-supported hard copy for free.[30]
[edit]Gmail Custom Time hoax
On April Fools' Day 2008 Google introduced a fake service, "Gmail Custom Time", which would allegedly
allow a user to send up to ten e-mails per year with forged timestamps. The hoax stated that by bending
spacetime on the Google servers, the e-mails actually get routed through the fourth dimension of time itself
before reaching their intended recipient.[31][32]
[edit]Gmail Autopilot hoax
On April Fools' Day 2009 Google introduced a service called Gmail Autopilot by CADIE.[33]
According to
Google, the service purported to automatically read and respond to emails for the user. It appeared to work
by analyzing messages for the emotions expressed in the message and either providing advice to the user
or automatically responding to the message.
[edit]Code changes
Gmail's JavaScript front-end was rewritten in late summer and early fall of 2007 and was released to users
starting on October 29, 2007. The new version had a redesigned contacts section, quick contacts box and
chat popups, which were added to names in the message list as well as the contact list. The contacts
application is integrated into other Google services, such as Google Docs. Users granted access to the new
version were given a link at the top-right corner which read "Newer Version". As of December 2007, most
new registrations in English (US) along with most pre-existing accounts are given the new interface by
default when supported. There remains the option to downgrade via a link labelled "Older
Version".[34][35][36][37]
These coding changes mean that only users of Internet Explorer 7, Firefox 2, Google Chrome and Safari
3.0 (or more recent versions) can fully use the new code. Internet Explorer 5.5+, Netscape 7.1+, Mozilla
1.4+, Firefox 0.8, Safari 1.3 and some other browsers will give limited functionality. Other browsers may be
redirected to the basic-HTML-only version of Gmail.[36][38][39][40][41]
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Gmail sorts e-mail only by conversations (threads), which can be a problem for large conversations. For
example, if a user sends a query to a large group of people, all of the responses are stored in a single
conversation that is impossible to break apart. There is no way to search for responses from one user
without getting the entire conversation. While deletion of individual e-mails is possible, most operations, such
as archiving and labeling, can only be performed on whole conversations. Conversations cannot be split up
or combined.[54]
[edit]Outages
Gmail has been unavailable on several occasions. On February 24, 2009 the Gmail service was offline for
2.5 hours, preventing millions of users from accessing their accounts. People who rely entirely on Gmail for
business purposes complained about these outages.[55][56]
Another outage occurred on September 1, 2009.
The problem was widely reported by users on Twitter, and Google acknowledged that the problem affects "a
majority of users" and promised an update on the situation by 1:53:00PM PDT which would include a time
estimate on when they expect to have the problem fixed.[57][58][59]
An update at 1:02PM PDT stated that theproblem was still being investigated and promised another update by 2:16:00 PM PDT. According to an
Official Gmail Blog post, IMAP and POP3 access was unaffected.[60]
Later that day, a Google vice president,
Ben Treynor, explained that the problem, which ultimately resulted in about 100 minutes of outage, was
caused by overloaded routers, triggered by a routine configuration change which added more router load
than expected. Treynor wrote, "Gmail remains more than 99.9% available to all users, and we're committed
to keeping events like today's notable for their rarity."[61][62]
............
The using software is free version, you can upgrade it to theupgrade version.http://www.allimagetool.com
In 2009, Google continued to experience outages across its network, leaving users without access to their
email, calendars, and virtual files.[63]
Key outage dates include:[63]
September 24, 2009: Gmail outage
September 1, 2009: Gmail outage
May 14, 2009: Google network outage
March 9, 2009: Gmail outage
August 7, 2008: Gmail and Google Apps outage
[edit]"On behalf of"
Prior to July 2009, any email sent through the Gmail interface included the Gmail.com address as the
"sender", even if it was sent with a custom email address as "from". For example, an email sent with an
external "from" address using Gmail could be displayed to a receiving e-mail client user as From
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[email protected] on behalf of [email protected](the display used by versions of
Microsoft Outlook). By exposing the Gmail address, Google claimed that this would "help prevent mail from
being marked as spam".[64] A number of Gmail users complained that this implementation was both a privacy
concern and a professionalism problem.[65]
On July 30, 2009, Gmail announced an update to resolve this issue.[66]
The updated custom 'From:'feature
allows users to send messages from Gmail using a custom SMTP server, instead of Gmail's (which will
continue to add the gmail address as "sender").[67]
[edit]Disabling accounts
Google's terms of service allow it to disable customer accounts at any time with no warning. Google
provides a page for users to complain if an account has been disabled in error, but although some users are
able to get their accounts back, for others it often generates no response, and users have no other way to
get their accounts returned to them.[68]
[69]
[70]
[71]
[edit]Reception
[edit]Awards
Gmail was ranked second in PC World's "100 Best Products of 2005," behind Mozilla Firefox. Gmail also
won 'Honorable Mention' in the Bottom Line Design Awards 2005.[72][73]
Gmail has drawn many favorable reviews from users for generous space quotas and unique organization.[74]
[edit]Trademark disputes
[edit]Germany
On July 4, 2005 Google announced that Gmail Deutschlandwould be rebranded as Google Mail.[citation
needed]From that point forward, visitors originating from an IP address determined to be in Germany would be
forwarded to googlemail.com where they could obtain an e-mail address containing the new
domain.[citation needed]
Any German user who wants a gmail.comaddress must sign up for an account
through a proxy. German users who were already registered were allowed to keep their old addresses.[citation
needed]However e-mails sent [email protected] still reach the right recipient.
The German naming issue is due to a trademark dispute between Google and Daniel Giersch. Daniel
Giersch owns a company called "G-mail" which provides the service of printing out e-mail from senders and
sending the print-out via postal mail to the intended recipients. On January 30, 2007, the EU's Office for
Harmonization in the Internal Market ruled in favor of Giersch.[75]
Google spoofed "offering" the same service in the Gmail Paper April Fool's Day joke in 2007.[76]
[edit]Poland
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In February 2007 Google filed legal action against the owners of gmail.pl, a poet group known in full
as abbreviated GMAiL (literally, "Group of Young Artists and
Writers").[77]
[edit]Russian Federation
A Russian free webmail service called gmail.ru owns the "Gmail" trademark in the Russian
Federation.[78]
The gmail.ru domain name dates from January 27, 2003.[79]
[edit]United Kingdom
The Google Mail logo
On October 19, 2005 Google voluntarily converted the United Kingdom version of Gmail to Google
Mailbecause of a dispute with the UK company, Independent International Investment Research.[80][81]
Users who registered before the switch to Google Mail were able to keep their Gmail address, although the
Gmail logo was replaced with a Google Maillogo. Users who signed up after the name change receive
a googlemail.com address, although a reverse of either in the sent email will still deliver it to the same
place.
In September 2009 Google began to change the branding of UK accounts back to Gmail following the
resolution of the trademark dispute.[82]
[edit]United States
A trademark for "Gmail" was first filed in January 28, 1999 in the United States by an individual named Milo
Crips.[83]
However, the mark became abandoned on July 31, 2000 because of a failure to respond to an
inquiry by the U.S. trademark office. Google, Inc. refiled for the mark on April 4, 2004, and was granted a
federal U.S. trademark on "Gmail" on December 11, 2007.[84]
Since then, Google's trademark rights for the
Gmail mark in the United States have not been challenged.
[edit]Competition
See also:Comparison of webmail providers
After Gmail's initial development and launch, many existing web mail services quickly increased their
storage capacity.[85]
For example, Hotmail increased space for some users from 2 MB to 25 MB, with 250 MB after 30 days, and
2 GB for Hotmail Plus accounts. Yahoo! Mail went from 4 MB to 100 MB and 2 GB for Yahoo! Mail Plus
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accounts. Yahoo! Mail storage then increased to 250 MB and in late April 2005 to 1 GB. Yahoo! Mail
announced that it would be providing "unlimited" storage to all its users in March 2007 and began providing it
in May 2007.[86]
These were all seen as moves to stop existing users from switching to Gmail and to capitalize on the newly
rekindled public interest in web mail services. The desire to catch up was especially noted in the case of
MSN's Hotmail, which upgraded its e-mail storage from 250 MB to the new Windows Live Hotmail which
includes 5 GB of storage. As of November 2006, MSN Hotmail upgraded all free accounts to 1 GB of
storage.[87]
In June 2005 AOL started providing all AIM screen names with their own e-mail accounts with 2 GB of
storage.[88]
The Gmail system flags as dormant every Gmail account which remains inactive for six months. After a
further three months, for a total of nine months dormancy, the system may delete such accounts.[89]
Other
webmail services have different, often shorter, times for marking an account as inactive. Yahoo! Mail
deactivates dormant accounts after four months, while Hotmailmatches Gmail's nine months.[90][91]
As well as increasing storage limits following the launch of Gmail, Yahoo! Mail and Hotmail also enhanced
their e-mail interfaces. During 2005 Yahoo! Mail and Hotmail matched Gmail's attachment size of 10 MB.
Following the footsteps of Gmail, Yahoo! launched the Yahoo! Mail Beta service and Microsoft launched
Windows Live Hotmail, both incorporating Ajaxinterfaces. Google increased the maximum attachment size to
20 MB in May 2007[92]
and to 25 MB in June 2009.[93]
[edit]See also
Find more about Gmail on Wikipedia's sister projects:
Definitions from Wiktionary
Textbooks from Wikibooks
Quotations from Wikiquote
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Comparison of webmail providers
Gmail interface
History of Gmail
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Lavabit
List of Google services and tools
Gmail Mobile
[edit]3rd party software
Gmail browser - site-specific browser for Gmail for Mac OS X 10.4 and 10.5..[94]
Gmail Drive
GmailFS
Mailplane
[edit]References
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6. ^ Wei, Coach K.. "AJAX: Asynchronous Java + XML?". www.developer.com. Retrieved 2008-11-13. "In fact, the
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01. "So recently the Gmail team has been working on a structural code change that we'll be rolling out to Firefox 2 and
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50. ^Google (2008). "Some file types are blocked". Retrieved 2009-03-01.
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53. ^Messages sent to mailing lists don't show in my inbox - Help Center
54. ^Google (2008). "Improper message threading". Retrieved 2009-04-19.
55. ^Where were you during the great Gmail outage of February 2009? VentureBeat
56. ^The Gfail Whale: Gmails Google Gears integration cant come soon enough VentureBeat
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58. ^Gmail Fail Strikes Again2009-09-01
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