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Google IT Technology

Gmail Turns 15, Gets Smart Compose Improvements and Email Scheduling (techcrunch.com) 56

Today, to celebrate its fifteenth birthday, the Gmail team announced a couple of a new and useful Gmail features, including improvements to Smart Compose and the ability to schedule emails to be sent in the future. From a report: Smart Compose, which tries to autocomplete your emails as you type them, will now be able to adapt to the way you write the greetings in your emails. If you prefer 'Hey' over 'Hi,' then Smart Compose will learn that. If you often fret over which subject to use for your emails, then there's some relief here for you, too, because Smart Compose can now suggest a subject line based on the content of your email. With this update, Smart Compose is now also available on all Android devices.
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Gmail Turns 15, Gets Smart Compose Improvements and Email Scheduling

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    use Gmail.

    • Hotmail FTW

    • Very true. The business model of monetizing via (often poorly) targeted advertising is a net negative for society.

      It is almost the worst system you can design. You often get poorly targeted advertisements or exceptionally targeted content that stokes outrage. Then, on top of that, the advertising system provides a mechanism for malicious content to execute on your browser.

  • It's beyond the end of March and I'm happily using Inbox.

    This whole EOL for Inbox better of been an April fools joke.

  • by swell ( 195815 ) <jabberwock@poetic.com> on Monday April 01, 2019 @09:35AM (#58365788)

    Yeah, it's crappy. It's been ignored for years. But it mostly works and I never have to put up with those oddball webmail interfaces. All my inboxes work in the same reliable way they have for years and Tbird doesn't try to think for me.

    • I couldn't get it to properly sync with Yahoo and Thunderbird seemed to run a lot in the background. Maybe I should try to get it working again...

    • It never kept up with the changing authentication landscape.

      eM client demonstrates how to smoothly set up connectivity with the different email hosts. A free email client that was as good would be nice. Updating TBird with those features would be a great idea.

    • Seconded.

      One place for all my email accounts, and they all work the same (simple) way. It's the perfect tool for those of us who neither want, nor require "help" writing emails. I believe my first email client was elm...now, off my lawn!

  • Lol, yeah. (Score:4, Informative)

    by apoc.famine ( 621563 ) <apoc.famine@gm[ ].com ['ail' in gap]> on Monday April 01, 2019 @09:36AM (#58365796) Journal

    I tried smart compose for all of one email, and every single suggestion it had was laughably off. I gave it 3 paragraphs to be useful, and it's clear that it's nowhere near useful. And it's not like I was typing something complicated - I was discussing trip logistics with a family member. There was not a single suggestion that I would have remotely considered selecting. It was baffling.

    I'm unclear who wants this sort of "help". It's so half-baked and shitty that I can't help but think that it's just more data collection that they hope will be useful in the future. It is 100% not ready for prime-time, unless you're writing at a 3rd grade level or below. And even then, I kind-of doubt it.

    • I tried smart compose for all of one email, and every single suggestion it had was laughably off. I gave it 3 paragraphs to be useful, and it's clear that it's nowhere near useful. And it's not like I was typing something complicated - I was discussing trip logistics with a family member. There was not a single suggestion that I would have remotely considered selecting. It was baffling.

      I'm unclear who wants this sort of "help". It's so half-baked and shitty that I can't help but think that it's just more data collection that they hope will be useful in the future. It is 100% not ready for prime-time, unless you're writing at a 3rd grade level or below. And even then, I kind-of doubt it.

      Eh, I kind of like the auto complete for "Hi Recipientsfirstname". I'll admit it.

      I mean, I know the Thunderbird/Pine way to accomplish that would be to set up by hand complex custom rules that trigger based on recipient. But this way is kinda cool too ...

      I'm also amused by the autocomplete suggestions for "I'm sorry" and variants when emailing my wife, lol

  • Need a better design (Score:4, Informative)

    by DarkRookie2 ( 5551422 ) on Monday April 01, 2019 @09:41AM (#58365830)
    GMail looks terrible now. Matrieal Design is terrible in general. Each app that uses this seems to be slow.
    It's also a lot slower than it use to be.
    It was the last straw on having a Google account.
  • That's nice... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sheramil ( 921315 ) on Monday April 01, 2019 @09:44AM (#58365844)

    ... as long as we can turn it off.

    • Not clear which of the new features you're talking about, but I read the description of the future delivery and it appears to be opt-in, so it won't get in the way. However, after checking with Gmail, the feature is not actually where it is supposed to be. I think the description sounds right, so I'm hoping that the upgrade is not fully propagated yet. It's supposed to be a pull-down option off the send button, but I can't find it yet.

      My main concern is if it is only absolute time, or if it supports relativ

  • by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Monday April 01, 2019 @10:10AM (#58365972)
    Why would anybody use Gmail? Is it really worth saving $2/month on email to let Google spy and catalog all of your email?
    • Why would anybody use Gmail? Is it really worth saving $2/month on email to let Google spy and catalog all of your email?

      Well, you are letting somebody do that, at least potentially (and you wouldn't know if they do or not), unless you PGP everything and pretty much only email yourself.

      I'm not sure it's intrinsically better to trust a few random dudes in Switzerland over a highly scrutinized publicly traded company.

      • by DogDude ( 805747 )
        I have a legal basis for suing my email company because I pay them. People who use GMail do not, because there is no payment (no "consideration" in legal terms). That's a huge difference.
    • Is it really worth saving $2/month on email to let Google spy and catalog all of your email?

      For most people, definitely.

  • I would love to have a filter to delete my email after X days. I get lots of mail generated from daily and weekly jobs. I don't need to keep for more than a week or two and it would be nice if they could delete themselves.

    Why is there no simple way to automate this?

  • It's like we're getting to the point in that short story by Isaac Asimov: "Fault Intolerant."

    https://aparthibo.wordpress.co... [wordpress.com]

    I always liked his stuff about automation. The Reeks and Wrecks from "Player Piano" always seemed pretty predictive.

  • I'd just like to recall how revolutionary Gmail's launch was back then - 1GB of free email space was completely and utterly unheard of back then. Free providers offered aprox. 10MB or maybe even 100MB of space back then, and emailing people was a really bad experience, because you would quite often get "the recipients mailbox is full" bounces.
    The confusion of something as ludicrous as 1GB free mail space being launched on a 1st of April was just sugar on top. We REALLY didn't know if Google was being serio
  • by jbmartin6 ( 1232050 ) on Monday April 01, 2019 @01:32PM (#58367390)
    Clippy has been reborn and thanks to the magic of marketing is now considered "smart"
  • Ever since their update last year, I frequently read emails, close my browser and come back later to see Gmail still shows those emails as unread. I've noticed if I read an email, I have to stay in my browser for 5-10 seconds before Gmail will mark it as read. This never happened before their update last year.
  • Isn't it about time for Google to put an end to GMail? Every other service of theirs I've tried to use got abandoned. I keep wondering how much longer they'll have search.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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