A free email service provided by google; still in limited beta trials, and attainable only by invitation, the much coveted gmail service allows for a
gigabyte of free storage space and discourages trashing old messages.
The service is paid for by advertisers; google uses an automated bot to read your saved emails (the higher storage capacity means it has more mails to read) and uses keywords it finds in the emails you are viewing to deliver targeted text ads that follow you up and down the page. This slight downfall however is more than compensated for by the vast amounts of storage space, and unheard of attachment size limits.
Unlike most webmails, gmail uses javascript much like a
flash player instead of HTML to navigate and operate the email; as such, users with certian browsers are unable utilize gmail to it's full advantage.
In short, gmail is รผber all other free email services. Some websites, such as www.gmailswap.com have taken the pursuit of these much coveted email accounts to the next level by letting users bargain or more often beg and
grovel for invites.
The following example is an
i-seek explination of the gmail service and it's effect on other free email providers as was presented
four months ago, in July of 2004:
E-mail enlightenment โ The munificence revealed.
Upon receiving a mystifying
e-mail from the
Hotmail Staff signifying an upcoming substantial increase in
storage and attachment limits, I was immediately suspicious of the
veracity of such an unexplainably generous change. Considering that this was in fact a Microsoft owned service, a
gratis increase in functionality and convenience was not something I was about to acknowledge unconscientiously. Initially I simply dismissed the concept, and even sent out some e-mail clones of the original message to various people with intent to ridicule it. While the
sincerity of the
proclamation is still to be established, a knowledgeable individual recently filled me in on the probable reasoning behind it. What he told me led me to believe that not only was it a legitimate Hotmail announcement โ but that it could very well be true.
While the conversation pertaining to the whole e-mail upgrade was indeed brief, I managed to derive a fair amount of enlightening information from it. Needless to say, numerous questions are still left unanswered โ Many of which I will be seeking the answers to in these upcoming weeks. I can only
imagine that many of you currently-wired individuals may already know more about it than I do; but for those of you who donโt, the following is what I know now.
A new free e-mail service (possibly to be provided by google) is now undergoing beta trial. The service (which my contact referred to only as โ
G-mailโ) would provide up to (and possibly exceeding) 100 times the storage and attachment space of the typical free e-mail service. I am still unaware of the other features that might be included. If such a service were to be launched successfully in the near future, it would make sense to see other providers suddenly make a move to prevent their users from abandoning them as rats abandon a
sinking ship. A sudden increase of value would be necessary to keep users โ such a reaction could bring free internet services to a completely new
echelon as providers fight to keep from joining
the ranks of the obsolete.