 Subscribe now!

|
| Online or offline emails? |
| Saturday, September 29, 2007 |
I have always never been able to decide about whether my email should be online or offline. For years I used Microsoft Outlook until I realised I liked email to be online and portable. But then Gmail went through its beta " oops, your email isn't available right now, try again later!" phase so I thought it would be best to download email to the desktop so I'd have access to it at all times. Plus everyone I bump into seems to love Thunderbird. So last night, I thought "screw it, just do it" and I downloaded the email client to see what it is like. But I gave myself a rescue hatch. I told Gmail to keep a copy of everything in its archive. So if I decide that Thunderbird is not for me, I can switch back to web-based mail in an instant. On first impressions, Thunderbird IS impressive. It is easily customisable and setting up your email accounts is a snap. Everything seems to work as advertised. Writing and sending emails is pleasant and I can attach different signatures for different email accounts (a feature I wish the web-based Gmail would have). The add-ons for Thunderbird are numerous and interesting and you can customise the noise a "new mail" notification makes (although I disabled this). You can also make filters to send email to different folders and you can even set up a "conversation view" of emails, just like Gmail. However, I do have 2 negative comments : 1. Thunderbird couldn't import my Gmail address book. It all came through garbled. The thought of having to manually type hundreds of contacts into my Thunderbird address book is depressing. 2. The RSS feeds ability is not easy to handle. I tried to unsubscribe from a feed for example and nothing happened. I tried to manually delete RSS folders and nothing happened. Plus instead of showing you the text in a new feed, it loads the source webpage which really slows things down. Another problem was that instead of downloading all RSS feeds, it downloaded everything from my Google Reader archive - thousands of old posts which I had to manually delete from Thunderbird. Tedious and time consuming. I'll keep experimenting with Thunderbird and see if it grows on me. I normally give new apps a minimum of a week to prove themselves. However, since I check my email from various computers, I may end up deciding to continue using the portability and convenience of web-based email. But we'll see. Thunderbird has many good things going for it that I am starting to get attached to it. How about you? When it comes to email, online or offline? Do you use Thunderbird? Labels: desktop, email, gmail, thunderbird |
|
|
|
| Turning Gmail into a social hub |
| Thursday, September 27, 2007 |
Steve Rubel of Micro Persuasion has done it again with another brilliant post on how to get more out of Gmail (or any other email service for that matter). The only downside for me is that I am not really much of a social networking person so I am unlikely to use much of what he suggested.
I don't like Twitter and I only use Facebook occasionally to play Scrabulous and to network with some business prospects. I am not completely into the whole "Facebook lifestyle" like a lot of other people. I don't need contacts' status details emailed to me as they happen and I don't feel the need to constantly change my status profile to let the whole world know what I am doing. So Steve has some great advice but on this occasion, it doesn't apply much to me. But I really like the way Steve thinks and how he always finds new uses for everyday web apps. His best post by far is turning Gmail into a personal nerve center. Definately a classic and one I highly recommend you check out. Labels: email, facebook, gmail, social-networking, twitter |
|
|
|
| The ten things I want to see in a new Gmail |
| Monday, September 24, 2007 |
 The net is buzzing over Garett Rogers' post on ZDNet about the possibility of a new Gmail interface being developed. This is quite interesting because it opens up the possibility that some of the things that Gmail is missing, or is currently doing badly, may soon be fixed. In what was the shortest honeymoon on record (15 minutes), Yahoo Mail and I divorced and I went back to Gmail double-quick and we had some great make-up email-making. So here's what I think should be changed in Gmail for my relationship with the email service to blossom : 1. Faster loading times. Currently, Gmail loads way too slow. It needs to speed up a bit, like a German cyclist on the Tour de France team on steroids. 2. The ability to open your contacts book without leaving your inbox. The ideal scenario would be a pop-up window. 3. When the contacts window is open, I want to be able to click a box next to the contact(s) I want to send an email to and for those email addresses to be inserted into the email window automatically. At the moment, I am having to remember email addresses from memory and my memory is as good as Alberto Gonzales in front of Congress. 4. Links next to "spam" and "trash" to empty those folders without entering them first. 5. The only thing I miss about Outlook and Yahoo Mail is having a preview pane to read the email without opening it first. Maybe Google could offer this option? I like the idea of using the arrow keys to go up and down my inbox with the email opening in a preview pane. 6. The ability to delete attachments but still keep the email that came with it. At the moment, you either have to keep everything or delete everything. You can't pick and choose. 7. Some kind of integration with Google Reader and Google Calendar. You can already do this with Firefox extensions and Greasemonkey scripts but I would prefer Google officially integrating these options into Gmail. 8. Coming back to the contacts book (as it is one of my most important areas of Gmail), the ability to enter instant messaging ID's which can be clicked on to open that program. Plus the ability to enter contacts websites and to be able to click on them and for them to then open in a browser. 9. More free space. Yahoo is offering unlimited email space. Why can't Google? At the very least, 5GB isn't too much to ask! 10. This is only a small thing but if Google wants to integrate Google Talk into Gmail then why not integrate it better? At the moment, you get this tiny little chat box in the bottom right hand corner of the screen and I absolutely hate typing in this tiny box. Why not make the box bigger, give us emoticons and rich text features? Make the chat box a pleasure to use! Well, that's my two cents..... Labels: email, gmail, google, yahoo |
|
|
|
| Making the Gmail compose window more portable |
| Saturday, September 22, 2007 |
There are often times when I want to fire off a quick email to someone but I can't be bothered opening up Gmail with its sometimes cumbersome and lengthy loading times. So I have been trying out a couple of methods to get the Gmail compose window to open by itself. It all involves making a bookmarklet.
There are two methods as far as I can see. You can either use a pre-prepared bookmarklet such as GmailThis! which is pre-populated with the URL of the page you are currently on (with the subject title of the email also filled in for you) or you can make your own compose window bookmarklet. The GmailThis! option is good if you want to just email a page link to someone. Clicking on the bookmarklet, the link to the page is already inserted and all you have to do is enter the email address of the recipient and off you go. But if you'd rather not have all that junk pre-populated in the email then you will have to roll your own compose window.  To do this, go to Gmail and click "compose" to open a new email window.  Click the small logo in the top right hand corner. This will disconnect the new mail window from the rest of Gmail. Right-click on the compose window (in any blue area) and choose to bookmark it (the option will appear in the right-click menu). Save the page to your bookmarks in a prominent place where it is easy to get to. The only problem with making your own compose window is that I can't get it to open in a new Firefox tab. I tried the "target_blank" possibility but it didn't work. Anybody got any ideas how I can get the compose window to open in a new tab? Am I using the wrong command? Oh and another thing - you probably know this already but when you are on the main Gmail page (the inbox page), holding down the SHIFT key and clicking "compose" opens the compose window in a separate pop-up window. Useful if you want to write an email and also keep an eye on incoming emails into your inbox (or check your contacts section). Labels: gmail |
|
|
|
| Adios Google Talk |
| Thursday, September 20, 2007 |
In this blog, I want to try to concentrate also on productivity and how to have a more relaxing / stress-free life. As someone with manic depression, I have to watch my stress levels very carefully so I am always on the lookout for ways to stay calm, ways to have a really great day and so on. I am also reading some productivity blogs such as Zen Habits which I am already totally addicted to. Thanks Aibek for recommending that one to me. One of the ways that I am trying to be productive and organised is in my online life. Last week, I deleted 75% of my website, and I also deleted 3000 emails from my Gmail account which was actually very liberating (Gmail is so fast now, it feels as if it is on steroids!). I unsubscribed from about 15 different email newsletters, set up filters to send the crap straight to the email trash bin, and today I decided to uninstall Google Talk and only check my email no more than once a hour. Being honest with myself, Google Talk was a serious impediment to my productivity. With its new mail notification feature, it was disturbing me constantly with its pop-up window and it was chaining me to my email all day. Now with it gone, and my determination to check email only sporadically throughout the day, I feel I can now concentrate on more important tasks - such as things that bring in money - REAL WORK! ;-) Now I just have to tackle my huge RSS reading list! At 200+ feeds, that will take some serious pruning...... Labels: email, gmail, google, productivity, RSS |
|
|
|
| Gmail versus Yahoo Mail - help me decide |
| Friday, September 14, 2007 |
I used to be a lifelong addict of Yahoo Mail until Gmail lured me away with lots of space (2.9GB at the time of writing this) and lots of other cool features. But in the past few weeks I have procrastinated over whether to return to Yahoo Mail. Gmail is starting to annoy me partly because it is so damn slow and partly because I am deeply shocked that Gmail's response to Yahoo's unlimited email space was to.....charge users for more email space! Yahoo offers unlimited FREE email space and a very reasonable $25 a year for unlimited Flickr space, whereas Google is demanding $500 for 250GB of space for email and photos. $500! The very thought makes me sick. If you can get free unlimited space at Yahoo, what makes Google think that people will shell out up to $500 for 250GB? The brand name? The Google "coolness" factor? I don't think so. I sure as hell won't spend that kind of money. Gmail already makes money off me by shoving adverts in my email space. In fact it downright pisses me off that Google has the nerve to charge like this when their direct rival is giving it away for nothing. At the very least, Google could put their prices down significantly. But $500? That's just really greedy. Especially for a product that is STILL not out of beta after 3 years (or is it 4 years?). I am not advocating for one moment that everything on the internet should be free but where is the marketing sense in charging users for something that your fiercest rival is giving away for nothing? I'd like someone at Google to explain the logic behind that one. Let's be honest - if two shopkeepers, side by side, offered the same product and one was free and the other was $500, which one would you take? It's only human nature to be drawn to the free one. So partly to get this all straight in my head, here are the pros and cons of each service. I'd appreciate your thoughts and opinions. Gmail : http://mail.google.com
Pros : conversation views labelling good search functions excellent filters (especially the spam filters) ability to add photos in contact book tight integration with calendar and Google Talk lots of add-ons and user scripts that integrate Gmail with calendar, RSS reader, and Google IG. built in Google chat and chat logs archived & searchable. the best one though is the ability to collect email from other email services and send email from those addresses INSIDE Gmail. Plus the keyboard shortcuts are excellent. Cons : at times, Gmail is unavailable or really slow. Gmail also claims their spam folders and trash folders auto-delete after 30 days but I checked those folders the other day and there are emails in there going back to June (which for all you mathematically challenged people out at the Googleplex is 90 days, not 30). My biggest concern though is that it takes ages to open an email or to show emails under a certain label (if you click on that label). The more emails you have, the longer it takes (so giving you more space kind of defeats the purpose if you have to delete some emails to make it go faster). Speed is definately the biggest problem for Gmail. Before you ask, I have no Greasemonkey scripts for Gmail to slow things down - only a Better Gmail Firefox extension from Lifehacker (and I don't even use half of the features that Better Gmail offers). Hardly anybody uses Google Talk, making the whole in-built chat thing redundant. Oh and one last thing, Gmail shows up as a complete mess on the Opera internet browser. The Gmail interface is like a dog's dinner and totally unreadable and unusable. Yahoo Mail : http://mail.yahoo.com Pros : An excellent Instant Messaging client (which millions of people use) which is integrated into Yahoo Mail. Completely free unlimited email space which means I can back up my files and MP3's. A drag and drop interface. Since my website and business email is with Yahoo (currently being forwarded to Gmail), I can have all my email together in the one place. One click links to empty spam and trash - without having to go into those folders first (which I wish Gmail would hurry up and do). More reliable than Gmail and virtually 100% uptime. I have rarely seen Yahoo Mail crash. A search capability to find emails again. The contact book has spaces to record Skype ID's and other instant messaging ID's. Cons :The interface is a little on the clunky side. Too much on the main page such as news headlines and weather. As far as I can see, I can't export my Gmail filters and labels. I also can't export my Google RSS reader subscriptions. So I would have to start them from scratch (a major pain in the ass). If I use up a lot of space, will Yahoo Mail slow down significantly, just like Gmail? No ability to add photos to my contact book, so the contact book lacks personalisation. The biggest inconvenience though is one of my own making in that I have completely married myself to the Google concept - so I use Google Docs, Google Talk and this blog is hosted on Blogger. All of these things are connected through my Google Account. So if I were to break away and use Yahoo Mail, I would have to either stop using Google Docs, Talk and Blogger, or maintain both the Yahoo account AND the Google account. I guess some more procrastination will be needed! Any opinions and thoughts would be appreciated in the comments. Labels: email, gmail, google, yahoo |
|
|
|
| I feel the need, the need for speed! |
| Monday, July 23, 2007 |
 I am a total fanatic about speed. I want computer / internet things to go fast. To quote Top Gun, " I feel the need, the need for speed!". Nothing aggravates me more than something going as slow as a 56k modem. Since I have DSL broadband, I figure it isn't asking much for my Firefox browser to open within the next century or for Gmail to load before it gets out of beta. So I am constantly looking for hacks and tweaks to make things go faster. I am constantly tweaking the Windows Registry to disable non-essentials and to make other things go faster. When I re-boot the computer, I am sitting there with a stop-watch timing how long it takes for the PC to re-boot fully. As a result, I have noticed the Windows OS speeding up more but three programs are still refusing to speed up for me - Firefox, Gmail and Microsoft Word (Word being the biggest offender). But I have found a few interesting tips that have helped to a certain degree : Firefox : strip down all non-essential extensions first of all, including any unnecessary Greasemonkey scripts. This includes anything that has no real practical use but only makes the browser look pretty (such as Color Tabs). Once that's done, right-click on the Firefox shortcut on your PC desktop and in the target box (where it says " C:\Programme\Mozilla Firefox\firefox.exe"), put /prefetch:1 at the end to now make the link "C:\Programme\Mozilla Firefox\firefox.exe" /prefetch:1 . What does this do? It makes the Windows operating system cache the Firefox browser to make it open faster (Windows normally does this with Internet Explorer so you're basically switching it around so Windows does it with Firefox instead). You will need to open and close Firefox a few times though to see any change but eventually I HAVE noticed Firefox speeding up slightly. I also found this which is a tweak to the about:config browser feature. I did what the author suggested and nothing appears to be going wrong as a result! Another thing which has helped is uninstalling any unnecessary toolbars and browser buttons. So choose your one favourite toolbar (mine is the irreplaceable Google Toolbar) and disable the rest. I strongly recommend avoiding the Yahoo toolbar which in my opinion is bloated and not as flexible as the Google Toolbar. Remove any buttons from your browser which you don't need (right-click on the bar and choose "customise"). I eventually managed to get everything I needed onto one bar and the difference in speed is noticable. The appearance of the browser is also nicer and sleeker. Less really is more. Gmail : This is a tough one which has annoyed me for ages. I love Gmail but its loading speed is embarrassingly long. But some things I have picked up in my speed quest. In the "settings", choose 25 conversations for your main view (you can choose to have up to 100 conversations in your main view which REALLY slows things down). Disable any unnecessary Greasemonkey scripts and any other unnecessary features in the Gmail settings. Install the Better Gmail extension and in the options, remove the invitation box (remove the labels box too if you feel you don't need it). The key is to not give Gmail too much to load up and to strip it down to the bare minimum that you need. Even with these changes though, it COULD be a lot faster. Microsoft Word : I have NOT found anything about speeding up MS Word. If anyone can provide any tips on how to make MS Word open faster and load "doc" files faster, I would be grateful. I use MS Word a lot and so far it is really annoying me when it can take up to 15 seconds to open a document (which might not sound a lot but you sit at your PC for 15 seconds and you'll realise quickly what I mean). At times I am seriously tempted to install Open Office which does the same job as MS Office and is free. Oh and before I forget, the award for the slowest installation ever goes to iTunes. I installed the upgrade to iTunes yesterday evening and it took a staggering 16 minutes to upgrade an already-existing program. It refreshed "registered components" 6 times, removed "security features" 5 times and by the time it announced to great fanfare that it was finished, I was blinking unbelievably at the PC clock, trying to work out if I had got the 16 minutes time wrong. But nope, it started at 21.41 and ended at 21.57. Then when I opened iTunes, I couldn't see any difference between that version and the last version! Any other speed freaks here with tips on making the computer go faster? Put them in the comments! Labels: firefox, gmail, microsoft, PC-tips |
|
|
|
| Wednesday, July 11, 2007 |
 OK, I admit it. I am addicted to RSS feeds. They're really useful for monitoring multiple websites and I wouldn't get my daily fix of news if I wasn't subscribed to the CNN feed and the BBC feed. I used to spend an inordinate amount of time each day reading them so I cut out all the non-essentials and outright crap and came up with my best "must-have" 50 feeds (although sometimes that creeps up a bit if I have a run of good luck finding interesting blogs). But quite often I am too busy to check my Google Reader app and when I do log in, I find 150+ new posts waiting for me. So when I was reading Steve Rubel's excellent " Micro Persuasion" blog, he mentioned that he has the same problem and he uses a service called RSSfwd to have new blog posts emailed to him. You still have the original posts sitting in your RSS reader but copies are emailed to you, free of charge. What are the benefits of this service? Well for a start, I check email much more than I check RSS feeds. So if an interesting / important post is put on a blog, I am likely to see it faster if it is sent directly to my email inbox. Second, using Gmail's filters, I can have the email automatically labelled and, once it's read, archived so I end up with a database of posts from my favourite blogs. So if I need to find a certain post in the future, I can simply search my Gmail archive for it (Google Reader still doesn't have a "search" capability which, considering that Google is a search engine company, is really perplexing!) The best way to set it up is to do what Steve suggests and set up a separate folder in your RSS reader (mine is "favs"). Then label the RSS feeds you want sent to you with the "favs" label and give the RSS links for your "favs" label to RSSfwd. That way, if you want to add or remove feeds from your RSSfwd mailings, all you have to do is add or remove the "favs" label, which is a lot easier than separately unsubscribing from each feed. How do you keep on top of your RSS feeds? Can anyone suggest a better idea? Labels: email, gmail, google, RSS |
|
|
|
| A flaw in Gmail's filters? |
| Thursday, July 05, 2007 |
 For the past several weeks, I have been radically over-hauling my email inbox and how my emails are archived. Filters and labels have been set up for virtually every email that comes in and I've worked it so that the only emails to actually hit my inbox are friends and unsolicited mail from blog readers, readers of my past articles and so on. Everything else, all the run-of-the-mill stuff gets labelled, archived and read later - especially the newsletters I subscribe to. This has had a huge impact on my productivity as before everything was hitting the inbox and so I was getting interrupted by the Gmail Notifier every 2-3 minutes telling me I had a new newsletter in my inbox or a new whine from a reader. Now with most of the emails getting automatically labelled and archived, I suddenly have more peace on my hands which in turn is helping my concentration and focus enormously. It really had to be done. With 50-75 emails coming in each day, I was literally drowning and any semblance of organisation I may have had at the beginning was now well and truly shot to hell. But now most of my newsletters have been unsubscribed (I am instead subscribing to the RSS feed) and every email has a home. Doing this exercise has been educational because until now I haven't really properly appreciated Gmail's powerful filters. Using keywords, you can direct any email to anywhere you want - instantly. But while I was trying to set up a filter for my attachments, I noticed a possible flaw. In Gmail's filter section, you can set up a filter for emails with attachments - but you can't filter emails according to a particular attachment type.So in other words, you can't filter emails with PDF attachments to go to one place with a particular label while emails with a "jpg" photo attachment go someplace else with another label. All emails with attachments get lumped together. This is particularly annoying because I want files (PDF's, Word documents, Powerpoint presentations, etc) to be given the label "files" while emails with photo attachments should only get the label "photos" instead. But as I see it right now, emails with attachments can only be given one label. Or am I wrong? Is there a workaround for this? Oh and another wonderful thing I did that is doing wonders for the productivity is removing Gmail Notifier from the PC. It has a very annoying noise that it makes when new mail arrives and it isn't long before it is grating on your nerves. So instead I downloaded Google Talk which has its own mail notification. It tells you in a nice-looking window that you have new mail - and it doesn't make a sound! Bliss! Peace reigns in the kingdom once more. Labels: email, filters, gmail, google |
|
|
|
| Gmail labels follow-up |
| Saturday, June 23, 2007 |
Following on from the previous post on Gmail labels, I have come across a problem and I am wondering if anyone can help. Every day, I have a lot of stuff automatically emailed to me as backup copies - backups of my blog posts, copies of news stories, photo backups, and so on. When these arrive in my Gmail account, I have a filter set up to automatically divert this stuff from appearing in the inbox, as they don't need to be seen right away. They are automatically archived with an appropriate label so I can find them again later if need be. But what really irritates me is that these emails are archived as "unread" which means I have to find these emails on a daily basis, tick them, mark them as "read" and untick them. OK, it only takes a few minutes but it gets really tedious after a while. From what I can see, there's no option in the filter set-up to have the email automatically marked as "read" before it is archived. So I am wondering if anyone has a hack / workaround solution to this problem. How can I tell Gmail to automatically mark certain emails as "read" before they are archived? First one to give me a good answer gets the first prize of "my eternal gratitude". I'll also make sure your place in heaven is guaranteed. Labels: email, gmail, google |
|
|
|
| Labels, folders.....what's the difference? |
| Friday, June 22, 2007 |
 It always amuses me when I read yet another online rant about Gmail abandoning the folder structure in their email application, in favour of labels. Whenever Gmail asks their users what features they would like to see, one of them is always "give us folders!". But answer me this - what precisely is the difference between a folder and a label? Answer : absolutely nothing at all. A folder is basically a place-holder for you to find something again when you need it. A label performs the same function. By labelling something in Gmail, you are assigning it to a certain area of your email app and if you need the email again, you will just click on the label name and up pops the email in question. A folder does exactly the same thing. So to all the anti-Gmail whiners that ridicule Google's decision to employ labels instead of folders, why don't you tell me precisely how a folder differs from a label? I bet you can't. I have been spending the last few days reading the excellent book "Lifehacker - 88 tech tricks to turbocharge your day" and it has a big email section. One of the things the book advocates is an empty inbox and immediately assigning each incoming email to a certain label or action. Unimportant low priority mails get archived with a label to be read later while highly important emails immediately arrive in the inbox to be dealt with. It's reading this book that has given me so much insight and appreciation to the labelling and filtering system that Gmail offers. Thanks to the new filters that I put in place yesterday, I haven't been interrupted by a single email all afternoon today. This has allowed me to get some tasks finished which have been sitting around idle for days and even weeks. Absolute bliss. Labels: email, gmail, google |
|
|
|
| Friday, June 08, 2007 |
Google Tutor posted an interesting article some time back comparing Gmail to Yahoo Mail and discussing what were the advantages and disadvantages of the two.
I am a Gmail fan myself. I can't even force myself to like the dreadful new Yahoo Mail interface. It's slow and clunky and it makes Hotmail look better by comparison. When that happens, you know something is seriously wrong!Labels: email, gmail, google, yahoo |
|
|
|
| HTML signatures in Gmail |
| Sunday, May 27, 2007 |
 My roll of creativity continues without a hitch! Hot on the heels of re-designing this blog, I decided to finally tackle getting a HTML signature into my Gmail. Normally this is not possible but with the help of a Firefox extension, you now can. Instead of plain text in your signature, you can have an interactive linky signature instead. First you need to install the Firefox internet browser (if you haven't done so already). Then you need to install the Firefox extension Better Gmail, which was made by Gina Trapani over at Lifehacker. Better Gmail basically takes all the other scripts that have been invented for Gmail and combines them into one extension. So if you have the same scripts installed as Greasemonkey scripts then you can remove them. This extension covers all those scripts - and more. When the Better Gmail extension is installed, go to your settings in Gmail and in the signature section, you will now see an option which says "Allow HTML in signature". Tick that and write your HTML code inside the signature box in your Gmail settings. When finished, save everything and you're done. One blogger suggests writing in a combination of CSS and HTML as well as enclosing everything in a table, but I disagree. I think you can get just as good results using plain HTML code. Plus it is much easier and less of a headache concentrating solely on HTML. I even managed to get a Skype call button included too! Labels: firefox, gmail, HTML, Lifehacker |
|
|
|
| Monday, April 09, 2007 |
Steve Rubel has delivered the goods once again. After the sensational two part guide on making Gmail your personal nerve center (part one and part two), he has now come up with part three. This part is not as useful to me as the previous posts but it is still essential reading for anyone with a busy stressful office-based life. That isn't my life so most of these excellent suggestions are of no practical use to me. It's amazing how many uses you can find for Gmail if you think hard enough. Labels: gmail, google |
|
|
|
| The non-emptying Gmail trash folder |
| Thursday, March 01, 2007 |
 I've been frequently noticing that Gmail isn't doing what it's supposed to be doing. The trash folder has a label which says that "all items in the trash folder are deleted after 30 days". But I have just checked and emptied the trash folder and it had 536 emails dating back to November last year. Now my maths might be wonky at times but isn't that 4 months ago?
Is anyone else having this problem with a non-emptying trash folder?
Labels: gmail |
|
|
|
|
Steve Rubel has written a follow-up blog post on how to make your Gmail address your own personal "nerve center". This post is good but not as good as the previous post. In this post, I've found that I already do most of it - I already archive all my Google Calendar emails and I already archive my blog posts. The PDF conversion feature sounds interesting but I am not sure if I want personal / sensitive information sent to Adobe. So this post has had limited use for me but it is still worth a read nonetheless. Labels: gmail, google |
|
|
|
| Gmail's "nerve center" |
| Tuesday, February 27, 2007 |
 I've been reading a fascinating post on the Micro Persuasion blog about using Gmail to set up your own "personal nerve center". Reading this makes me realise the ever-expanding uses for Gmail and other Google applications.  I particularly like the Twitter one where you can get BBC and CNN headlines sent directly to your Google Talk application which is embedded inside Gmail. I am a big news junkie and I have been subscribed to CNN's Breaking News email service for many years now. But if this Twitter / Google Talk thing really starts working without any hitches, I may consider ditching the email service. The cool part is that when a news headline arrives in your Google Talk app, Gmail automatically files it away in your Gmail archive where it can be found and retrieved later. The other interesting part of the post is having your del.icio.us links and Google Reader "shared links" sent to your email every day for filing. Since I am a big user of both services, this will prove quite useful. The post has also got me considering the possibility of applying for Google Apps. The lure for me would be the 10GB of email space. But at $50 a year, I think I would probably wait until I see how fast I am going to use up the free 2GB that Gmail already gives users. After 3 years and 5500 emails, I am only at 13% of the storage space. Labels: BBC, CNN, del.icio.us, gmail, google |
|
|
|
|
|