Have a g-mail account?

Do you have a Gmail acount


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shadowdude said:
If its a terabyte of space now, I could use that for an extension to my hard drive! :)

For most people it's still 1GB. But according to the article a small number of people got 1TB, I myself stil have 1GB. Hopefully those I gave invites to also still have 1GB.. :p
 
shadowdude said:
I'll just use my Yahoo account as an extension then! :p :crazyeye: ;)

If Gmail offered 1TB you would use it as your HD. ;)

More Gmail news:

Gmailers can now import address books stored by other email services into their email account

Google has quietly added a feature to its free email service that lets people import their address book contacts from rivals Yahoo, Microsoft and America Online.

Since the weekend, Google's free email service, called Gmail, has been letting its users transfer their address book contacts from Yahoo Mail, Microsoft's Hotmail and AOL Mail. Yahoo allows immediate exporting of its contact lists onto other clients such as Gmail, but for Hotmail and AOL in particular, people have to build their special files through a spreadsheet, which means the process would normally involve more steps.

Gmail's software also lets people add contacts from Microsoft's Outlook email client, a feature supported by Yahoo and Hotmail as well.

A Google spokesman confirmed that the tool, and other new features, launched over the weekend. He declined to comment further, citing the company's quiet period before it goes public later this year.

The launch of the feature illustrates the rising tide of one-upmanship surrounding free email. Google in April began offering a test version of Gmail that included 1GB of free storage. The launch altered the free email landscape, dominated by Yahoo and Hotmail, and caused Yahoo to increase its own free storage limit from 4MB to 100MB. Hotmail then raised its storage limit from 2MB to 250MB.

While Yahoo and Hotmail have the advantage of many years of service and millions of users, Google's entry could shift the balance of power. In fact, Google has launched a number of properties, such as its Orkut social networking site and Google News, that have put it in closer competition against the Web portal giants.

Yahoo spokeswoman Mary Osako said the new tool doesn't change the competitive balance among the services. "Yahoo Mail users have enjoyed the ability to both import and export address book information for years, and we hope that others in the industry will share our commitment to providing consumers with a highly useful and convenient service," she said.

Microsoft did not immediately comment on the new features. The Gmail updates were first reported by Microsoft Watch.

In addition to its contact import tool, Gmail now gives users the option of including a signature at the bottom of messages. Gmail also began supporting Apple Computer's Mac OS X's Safari Web browsers, for versions 1.2.1 and newer.

Google also last week began promoting on its home page a link to Picasa, an online photo site that the company acquired last week, the spokesman confirmed.


And the worst news yet :cry:

Google has altered its Gmail membership policy to stop people making money from the sale of popular email addresses

Google changed its Gmail membership policy this week to prevent people from profiting from the sale of popular email names.

According to Google's new policy, altered on Monday, the Web search company prohibits Gmail subscribers from selling, trading or transferring the free email accounts "for any unauthorised commercial purpose." It also bars people from setting up multiple accounts in violation of the policy.

The changes are designed to deter people from creating multiple email accounts with the purpose of reselling or trading them, according to a source at the company. The policy alterations do not target people trying to barter Gmail invitations, which allow people to sign up for a new membership.

The search company was probably responding to instances of individuals and commercial ventures attempting to profit from the popular, yet not widely available, service. For example, an eBay auction for Gmail account names "Bush04@gmail.com" or "Kerry04@gmail.com" -- for the respective campaigns of the top Republican and Democratic presidential candidates -- could violate the rule.

Google began publicly testing Gmail in late March, in a move that rattled rival email providers with promises of vast improvements to free Web-based email. Gmail, for example, offers users a whopping 1 gigabyte of storage and lets people search unlimited archives of conversations. At first, Google let only select family and friends open accounts, yet it has slowly opened up membership more broadly to friends of those already holding accounts.

Yet the clublike demand for accounts has inspired entrepreneurs. Online auction site eBay has as many as 2,000 listings for Gmail invitations for sale, ranging from 1 cent to as much as $30 for 10 accounts. Web operations such as Gmail Swap have cropped up to help people exchange invitations for goods and services. And the Institute for Spam and Public Policy recently started a Web site and campaign called Gmail 4 Troops to encourage people to share their Gmail invitations with military fighting in the Iraqi war.

Potentially more concerning, however, could be people who sign up for Gmail accounts with a common or company-trademarked name with a profit motive. The practice is similar to parties who purchase potentially lucrative, trademarked domain names and attempt to sell them to the owner, a practice called domain squatting.

Google's Gmail also has sparked criticism from privacy advocates because it involves scanning the contents of email and delivering related ads. The California Senate passed a Gmail bill that seeks to limit companies' ability to survey email for advertising purposes.
 
Ankka said:
One TB? Now that MUST be a joke...! :wow:

Doubt it. But I would't expect it to be anything less then for a paid membership.;) 1GB isn't all that large, but 1TB is huge. No hardrive could match that. :eek:
 
Even for a paid account 1TB is simply enormous. You'd have to get quite a lot of spam to fill that...
 
Ankka said:
Even for a paid account 1TB is simply enormous. You'd have to get quite a lot of spam to fill that...

Which makes me wonder as to the point of raising it. I suppose they were testing it. HELLO! I don't see any text ads on the sides of E mails. :confused:
 
MarineCorps said:
HELLO! I don't see any text ads on the sides of E mails. :confused:

I'm baffled by this also. Never seen a single ad.
 
fret said:
I'm baffled by this also. Never seen a single ad.

Oh good so it's not just me :crazyeye: Least I no longer have to look at those ads for poly :p ;)

@Chairman Meow: Would explain all but Google not commenting. :confused:
 
I wanted to use Ad Muncher to kill those ads, but apparently Ad Muncher doesn't work with Gmail - I can't access any buttons or links with Ad Muncher turned on. But they're not that bad because it's not my main account (although I am ready to switch over).
 
Hi, i know i am pretty new to this forum, but does anyone have a g-mail invite left, i would like to try it out, but on another forum the thread is like 288 pages long, i have heard some of you saying you had invites left, could anyone invite me please.
 
Shycho said:
Hi, i know i am pretty new to this forum, but does anyone have a g-mail invite left, i would like to try it out, but on another forum the thread is like 288 pages long, i have heard some of you saying you had invites left, could anyone invite me please.

I have one left. But I need your current e mail adress to send the invite to. :)
 
MarineCorps said:
@Chairman Meow: Would explain all but Google not commenting. :confused:
Apparently all Google said about it was that iit was a bug and that it would be fixed. I guess they figured since it's still in beta, there was no reason to explain further, even though considering the amount of attention it got, maybe they should have.

BTW... if anyone has an extra gmail invite, chairmanmeow(at)bolt.com :)
 
Chairman Meow said:
Apparently all Google said about it was that iit was a bug and that it would be fixed. I guess they figured since it's still in beta, there was no reason to explain further, even though considering the amount of attention it got, maybe they should have.

BTW... if anyone has an extra gmail invite, chairmanmeow(at)bolt.com :)
Wise of you to put the (at) so that spambots can't get it!
 
thanks MarineCorps i sent you a u2u incase you didn't get it, my e-mail is ShychoG(@)hotmail.com

Thanks
 
shadowdude said:
Wise of you to put the (at) so that spambots can't get it!
Mark my words, spambots will eventually learn to recognize spam-disguising techniques like (@), (at), and other kinds of ways, and every disguising people did before will be rendered useless. Spambots will get those address en masse. Spammers aren't just going to sit there and wonder why they can't get addresses. They're gonna do something about it!
 
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