How Does Gmail Stack Up In The Webmail World?
Wrecks writes "Flexbeta compares several email services that promise 1 GB of storage to see how they measure up to Google's Gmail. The review mentions how one service, ShireMail, offers far less features than SpyMac yet cost 10 times as much. The article also mentions how well Gmail is able to filter spam messages." Among the webmail options not mentioned in this review (the authors compare a total of five offerings) is another gig-of-mail offering from the Indian rediffmail.
Shiremail won't be offering anything if Warner Brothers manage to claim proof of ownership to the word "shire". The Register had an article where they are now taking the owner of shiremail to court because if might confuse their customers who might think that it is related to LoTR.
Jonathanjk.com
It's not about the gig-o-space as much as it is about the superb interface. Don't get me wrong. I really like having all that space but the UI is really slick. I've heard a lot about the lack of folders but once you get used to the lables you wonder why nobody else had implemented it first. It's great being able more then one label to a message.
Gmail isn't perfect. If it were it wouldn't still be in beta. The filters and addressbook are a bit primitave. I would also really like to have the ability to filter based upon a Google search.
Thus far I give Gmail an A+ and don't see any sign of Google slowing down with it's development and improvment.
The problem with GMail is that you have to use a web browser to read your e-mail. What I want is the ability to use a normal client like Thunderbird to read my mail, but have the search capabilities of GMail. I can't find a way to accomplish this even though I own and run my own Linux mail server.
:)
Is there any way of indexing my Maildir mailstore, or perhaps replacing my IMAP server with something more powerful that could give me a Gmail type search? If not, why not?!
Providing 1GB space for each user is not at all costly ! The latest price quote for a 40GB HDD is approximately $80 if not less. So for each user ie for each GB the cost comes to $2/user which is nothing for gaints like Google, Rediff, Spymac etc etc...
Whatever floats your boat...
I personally dont TRUST any free email account now, nor will I. Free email accts are great for internet correspondance, reistration of other crap services, and other nuisance go-no go for not having an email.
The key here is trust. I pay nothing, so anything past nothing is essentially untrustable. What is there for me to take away? What I conside rin the webmail world, anything I cant get in 1 session, I *consider* deleted or lost. Whether its there later (it usually is), I still dont trust it.
This is probably offtopic, but what the hell...
Google currently handles a good USENET service, a good news service, the internet's best web search service, a blogging service, and now an email service.
What's keeping them from taking a unifying approach to everything they have? I'd love to have a home page that I could customize the content (sort of like what my.yahoo has). Latest threads in subscribed-to newsgroups, headlines from news.google.com with my favorite filters, quick summaries of who's sent new emails, etc.
Keep in mind, I'm not saying that this sort of portal service should be mandatory and the only way to get at the individual services. I understand that google's simplicity is part of its elegance. But, at the same time, one of the things that spymac is doing right is that all of their services are available from a central location. If google is going to keep branching out into all these new areas, why not try to create a singular portal to get at all of them?
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Bleah! Heh heh heh... BLEAH BLEAH!!! Ha ha ha ha...
I've been using Gmail for a few months now. The interface is very good, very useable, and has quite a few features that the other services do not offer (such as hot keys).
The only problem with Gmail is that the address book sucks. It only stores basic information, it adds weird people to your address book without your permission (mailing lists), and worst of all it doesn't yet support distribution lists.
IF they fix the address book, the Gmail service will be awesome.
Bryan
To be totally honest:
I haven't found gmail to be that good at filtering spam. I forward two accounts to it that have been around since, oh, 1998 or so and it catches maybe 30 percent of the spam, the rest ends up in my inbox. We're talking about 500 messages a day.
Using Hotmail with those same two accounts, I'd see about 5 percent of the spam, maybe less. Yahoo is a little worse, about 10 percent in the inbox.
So I hope gmail gets better. I do like a lot of things about it; the conversations, stars, etc... very nice and easy to use.
You know you're a geek if you've ever replied to a tagline.
Sure gmail is considered webmail, but its definitely one of the first webapps I've that seen. When i'm checking my gmail I don't feel like i'm using webpage, I feel like i'm using a very well crafted application.
------------------------------ SirPhreak - "It's Thinking..."
Since about a month, my Yahoo mail Plus account offers me ad-free email with 2 GB of space. Integrated with an address book which I can export and import in a number of formats, and a calendar. They also have a feature where I can create disposable addresses as often as I want, for example when I am web shopping. I also pay for their Personal Address feature, so that they basically host email for a domain I own. I also get POP access, forwarding, (but I don't use it) and great spam filtering.
This costs some money of course, but I think it is worth it. I haven't tried gmail (no one has invited me), many people here think it has many unique features, but yahoo mail has features that gmail does not have. Until gmail offers personal address, there is no chance I will switch.
Good point.
I've been reporting it, but haven't noticed gmail getting any better at identifying it.
I consider spam to be a major problem with my personal email accounts right now. With hotmail offering 2 gig of space (like you would ever need that) and its excellent spam block, I may just opt to fork over the $20 per year for the spam filter alone.
You know you're a geek if you've ever replied to a tagline.
There are "Ads by Google" just under every page's review text. At the very least, there's a conflict of interest here.
Gmail is actually amazingly easy to scrape because you don't have to scrape it - it runs kinda like a web service, with javascript sending message packets back and forth to the gmail servers (thats why it's so fast - the JS gets a message packet and updates the on-page view, rather than reloading the entire page). Check out POP Goes the GMail and GMail loader (heck, just google for GMail) for a description. Note that using these is technicaly against the GMail TOS. I'd pay (a reasonable fee) for legitimate, documented access to the GMail api, though.
Don't know if this has been mentioned yet, but a large portion of the web seems to be plagued now by the connnecting to page2.googlesyndication.com evil. There must be a timer delay in there as well because it always takes around 10 seconds to finish. And tons of sites are using this google ad service of course...
- I really want my editor when composing longer emails.
- The fact that they have shortcut keys is great, but there need to be more of them. (no file to trash? no visit trash? I realize that one is supposed to Archive rather than Trash, but there's definitely a lot of one-shot email that has lost all purpose after reading it once.)
- The limits on filters and how they are matched are annoying.
- Mutt's sort by threads is as good as conversations. Mutt with thread-editing is possibly better.
- Mutt's limit function and searching are good enough for the searching I do. The only way gmail is better is that, since there are no folders, you can search all "folders" at once. I'm pretty good about saving things to the right folder (since you can set the default save folder via a set of match operations), so this rarely comes up.
With longer gmail use, I would probably find more use for search. This all being said, if gmail offered imap I'd be extremely interested, in that I could both use the web interface when using a friend's machine, and switch over to mutt when I want to do more serious mail usage.GET YOUR WEAPONS READY! --DR.LIGHT
I opened a rediffmail account a few weeks ago, partly because I wanted to have two brand-new 1-gb webmail accounts (gmail is the other), to see what spam arrives at which, how well they handle things when I really do have a significant amount of email in there, etc. I've certainly had no trouble sending messages between those accounts (or to / from there some other, existing email accounts). To me, it's not spectacular (I prefer gmail's actual interface), but it's clean and seems to work very well.
timothy
jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5