Gmail or Yahoo! Mail? Now that Yahoo! Mail has matched the Gmail offer of 1GB storage to its free e-mail customers, Google is doing the obvious thing and pulling ahead again, reopening "the one-gig gap" between its Gmail service and all-comers.
A year after the launch of Gmail in beta on April 1 of last year, Gmail users will now be able to store e-mail and attachments up to 2GB per account.
"Our goal is to make sure storage is no longer an issue for web mail users," said Marissa Mayer, Google's director of consumer web products - a clear indication that even 2GB is by no means as high as Google is prepared to go to keep itself in the lead over all-comers.
About i-Technology News Desk SYS-CON's i-Technology News Desk trawls the world of Internet technologies for news and innovations and presents IT professionals with updates on technology advances, business trends, new products and standards.
Harshad wrote: All this
storage talk is making my
head go spinning.....
Sure, gmail offers 2GB at
the moment ( my account
at gmail now has 2100MB
i.e. 2.1 GB of free
space), but as rightly
said by some one its all
messy.... I have used
many free GB email
providers, but Yahoo, i
feel, rules the
competition . True
enough, gmail is still a
beta version provider,
but generally and
overall, i wd go in for a
yahoo ( it opens on any
browser version - unlike
gmail which makes a lot
of fuss in this regard).
And who needs 2GB of
space anyways .. 1GB is
more than enough...
Erwin Morales wrote:
welcome infinite+1 bytes
in my gmail inbox,
hotmail survives only for
the msn messenger
service, if it's true the
messenger google's
service byebye msn &
hotmail.
James FInstrom wrote: AH
MAN!! OH NO!!! i finaly
got my display to read
your using 2% of your
1gig limit now it says
your using 0% again :((
life is rough I need more
friends...
peterrk wrote: Does it
really matter? There are
so many hoops to jump
through tho get a Gmail
account, who would
bother? All they keep
doing is keeping their
name in the news without
really offering anything
to the vast majority of
internet users. Offering
2GB to a handful of users
is hardly a big deal.
I'll get more excited
when Gmail finally gets
real.
pjh wrote: To make labels
more like folders, all
you have to do is quickly
apply a label, then hit
the 'archive' button.
You then only see the
message from within the
view of that label (like
with a folder), and you
still get the
functionality provided by
labels.
I use labels and stars
all the time!
The difference between
labels and folders is
that with folders you can
only put the message into
one folder (unless you
make a copy of the
message), whereas with
labels, you can apply
multiple labels to the
same message.
I'm surprised that gmail
is slow for you - for
most people it is
lightning fast! Far
faster than Hotmail...
True, it takes a while to
load in the first place,
but when you get into it
everything is (almost)
instant!
freaking idiot wrote:
what's the difference
between labels and
folders apart from the
fact that the labelled
messages can still be
retrieved from anywhere?
bigmomma wrote: Labels
are much much better than
folders - for example,
you can put multiple
labels on a conversation.
But really really really
......the key is to
search for your email
rather than (folder--sort
--scan!)....I shudder to
imagine what it would be
to go back to yahoo etc.
Stars are pretty useful
for example, to mark
emails you have read,
want to reply but not
replied.
Googler wrote: Gmail is
okay. Sure the space is
nice, but their lack of
folders for organization
when you have a lot email
is a real pain. Instead
you have to archive
messages and then search
for them later. Yeah,
yeah, yeah, I get it,
google it. But still, my
kingdom for customizable
folders!
Does anyone really use
the Starred or Labels
features? Bah, too much
extra work! Labels are
the closest thing to
having folders, but all
the messages are still
displayed in a single
area, forcing you to
search for messages
unnecessarily.
Gmail is also slow for
some reason. Maybe due
to the indexing??
My tip, use Gmail for
archiving. Yahoo is
still the best for day to
day email. Hotmail is
just okay, they sorta
ruined it when they
changed the interface and
made you perform an extra
click to get your
messages. It used to be
so much better.
nteeretsing wrote: |||
Are they just using
massive NAS/SAN? Are the
messages themselves
stored randomly across
many systems with each
user just having a common
index of messages? |||
Great questions.
Hopefully Google will
monitor this thread and
reply?
David wrote: What's the
technical architecture
used that allows so many
users to access lots of
front end web servers and
reach a common set of
backends where the email
messages are stored?
Does Google at least keep
a given user's messages
all in one location, or
does it have some sort of
distributed email message
storage system for a
given user?
Are they just using
massive NAS/SAN? Are the
messages themselves
stored randomly across
many systems with each
user just having a common
index of messages?
gmail.c wrote: &&&
TomViolin commented on 1
April 2005:
There's a dynamically
updating counter on the
Gmail login page.
Although the story on the
login page, as a whole,
is an April Fool's joke,
the actual quotas are
following the counter,
gradually increasing....!
&&&
Ha - Very cool! Hre's the
login page
(http://mail.google.com)
- currently it reads:
"1344.576892 megabytes of
storage (and counting)
for every user."
TomViolin wrote: There's
a dynamically updating
counter on the Gmail
login page. Although the
story on the login page,
as a whole, is an April
Fool's joke, the actual
quotas are following the
counter, gradually
increasing....!
From Application
Virtualization to Xen, a
round-up of the
virtualization themes &
topics being discussed in
NYC June 23-24, 2008 by
the world-class speaker
faculty at the 3rd
International
Virtualization Conference
& Expo being held by
SYS-CON Events in The
Roosevelt Hotel, in
midtown
While EDI transactions
account for most
worldwide commercial
activity, XML-based
alternatives are
beginning to gain
traction. According to
Forrester Research,
stateful XML, stateless
XML, and even flat file
exchanges are all
projected to grow at a
faster rate than EDI over
the next few
Red Hat is a trusted
open source provider.
Red Hat offers enterprise
customers a long-term
plan for building
infrastructures on the
quality and innovation of
open source. Combining
open source operating
system platform, Red Hat
Enterprise Linux,
together with
applications, management
JustSystems announced
that it is contributing
intellectual property
rights for its invention
of eXtensible Business
Reporting Language (XBRL)
rendering technologies to
XBRL International, the
standards body
responsible for the
oversight of the XBRL
specification. The
invention, known a
JustSystems announced its
campaign to help
organizations adopt XBRL
(eXtensible Business
Reporting Language), the
XML-based standard for
communicating financial
and business information.
In related news,
JustSystems also
announced that it has
contributed intellectual
property rights of
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