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Gmail Goes Public

An anonymous reader writes "Google has apparently given the green light for Google's e-mail (Gmail) to be open to the general public." From the registration page: "As we make room for more Gmail users, we want to first extend invitations to Google users. We're still working to make Gmail better, so for now, we're just inviting a small number at random. Looks like that's you! We're really excited to share Gmail with you and we hope you like it." Observed at the P-I Buzzworthy Blog as well.

10 of 527 comments (clear)

  1. I can't even by stoolpigeon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    people to take my gmail invites any more. I think it's a little late to open it to the public-- everybody already has an account.

    --
    It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    1. Re:I can't even by jp10558 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I don't know - I like the lack of ads. I like the speed of Eudora on messages on my local machine. I like being able to look through messages and not have to be online. I like the lack of "tags". I like unlimited attachment size. I like GPG plugins.

      I like e-mail being separate from websites. I like not having my mail processed to show me ads.(wait I already said that didn't I?)

      Oh, wait - I like not getting spam from those people who try every combination of @gmail, @yahoo etc....

      And, I like VNC through Java applet for checking my mail or anything elsewhere! Just me though, I like taking the whole interface if I can(which I can do via broadband).

      I also like not being more beholden to big companies for my communication.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    2. Re:I can't even by ducman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm one of those people who are still asking, "why?" I admin my own server and use IMAP. Since I travel regularly, I'm more likely to have my PowerBook than an internet connection. Mail.app lets me have my mail with me, search it, work offline, move things onto and off of the server, if I want to. And of course I can use the web mail client on the server to read mail from any other machine. So why would I let Google search through all my mail and target me with ads?

      --
      "We have nothing in common, your attitude annoys me, and your political views are appalling."
  2. Google Section by dadybeef · · Score: 4, Insightful

    1st Post Recommendation - Google Section!

    --
    --beef
  3. I don't see any way to create an account yet. by Behrooz · · Score: 4, Insightful

    2. How do I sign up? When can I get a Gmail account?

    We're currently only offering Gmail as part of a preview release and limited test. We don't have details on when Gmail will be made more widely available, as that depends in part on the results of the test.


    Uh. Without a way to create public accounts, this is just another form of beta. Looking on the main gmail page, it sure looks like there's no way to create an account for someone who doesn't have a google account yet.

    Beta? Yes. Public? About as much as it was before.

    On the other side, I've got about 50 invites left.

    --
    "We have to go forth and crush every world view that doesn't believe in tolerance and free speech." - David Brin
  4. Google: Fix the top post reply method by Neil+Watson · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Please fix the interface so that replies do not top post. (Yes, I did submit this to Google when I first discovered it).

  5. POP3 by FiReaNGeL · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I just hope that the best feature of Gmail will remain free now that they've gone public.

    POP3 access, no strings attached (read, stupid Hotmail requiring Outlook). Gotta love that.

  6. Re:why not sooner? by interiot · · Score: 4, Insightful
    What happened when Blizzard released World of Warcraft to the public? Its popularity far outstripped Blizzard's predictions, and their previous rock-solid product became an endless string of "emergency maintenance" announcements.

    Same with Google... GMail requires space to be dedicated to each new person. If the influx of new people is greater than the rate at which they can aquire new hardware and squash new scalability bugs, then it won't be rock-solid anymore.

    Controlling popularity is important. Google might be overdoing it a little bit... But in this game, it's far better to err on the side of going too slow, especially when you're as popular as google is.

  7. Re:Google: Fix the top post reply method by jonadab · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > Bottom posting is for grizzled usenet hippies.

    Bottom-posting (quoting the whole message and then putting your reply at the bottom) and top-posting (quoting the whole original message below your reply) are both cretinous and bad. The correct way to quote is interleaved, i.e., you quote a relevant excerpt, reply to it, then if necessary quote another relevant excerpt, reply to it, and so forth.

    Gnus gets this right: it quotes the whole message (depending on how you have it set up) (except the signature (if it can tell where the signature starts)), but if you go to any point in the message and start typing, it breaks there and rewraps the quoted portions above and below, and your reply gets inserted at the proper place, unquoted, as a separate paragraph. Any parts of the quoted message you don't need to reply to, you're supposed to delete before sending. Gnus warns you if you try to send a message that's mostly quoted material and very little original response (though it'll let you do it if you insist).

    But I don't suppose it's reasonable to hold a webmail interface to the standard of functionality set by Gnus.

    --
    Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  8. Re:why not sooner? by learn+fast · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Another post from someone who's never taken a MARKETING class.

    This has nothing to do with server space. Gmail would never be as popular as it is today if they hadn't used their ingenious "give these codes to all your friends!!! -- or else you can't get in" promotion. This has nothing to do with a beta stage it's a marketing promotion. Sometimes, making your product artificially scarce makes people want it more, and I for one am once again awed by Google's awesome duality of marketing and technical brilliance.