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Dave2986
04-01-2004, 04:40 AM
"MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. (AP) -- Online search engine leader Google Inc. announced plans Wednesday for a free e-mail service providing 250 to 500 times more storage space than market leaders Yahoo! Inc. and Microsoft Corp., delivering the latest challenge in a fierce fight for Web supremacy.

Google's service, called "Gmail," will offer 1 gigabyte of storage space, roughly 500,000 pages of e-mail. Gmail users will be able to receive up to 10 megabytes in a single e-mail -- more than the free services of Yahoo and Microsoft's Hotmail allow to be stored in an entire mailbox.

Yahoo offers up to 4 megabytes of free e-mail storage while Hotmail provides 2 megabytes of free storage. Both services charge for additional space.

Gmail also will enable its users to type a keyword into a built-in search box to find information contained in their e-mailboxes within a matter of seconds.

But there's a catch to the new service. Hoping to turn a profit from Gmail, privately held Google has programmed its computers to dissect the topics being discussed in the e-mails and then deliver text-based ads related to the subjects.

For instance, an e-mail from one friend to another discussing an upcoming concert might prompt Google to include an advertising link from a ticketing agency.

"I don't think (the ads) will be annoying at all," Google co-founder Larry Page said during an interview Wednesday. "We think this will give us a business model that will work and allow us to provide a high-quality service."

Page said Gmail shouldn't raise serious privacy concerns because Google plans to closely guard the content of the e-mail messages. Ads are unlikely to accompany most e-mails, he said.

For now, Google is only opening up the service to invited users but expects to make it accessible to everyone within a few weeks, Page said. People interested in signing up for an e-mail account are being encouraged to register at www.gmail.com. (http://www.gmail.com./)

Google's entrance into e-mail marks the latest volley in its battle against Yahoo and Microsoft.

While those two giants have been revving up their own search technology, Google has recently unveiled a series of improvements to protect its turf.

By offering e-mail, Google is now invading a space dominated by Yahoo and Microsoft's Hotmail service.

Yahoo has 52.6 million unique users per month in the United States, according to a February survey by online research firm comScore Media Metrix. Microsoft's Hotmail service is next, with 45.4 million users. AOL has 40.2 million users, but they pay monthly subscriptions.

Officials at Yahoo and Microsoft's Hotmail division declined to comment on Google's entry into a new category.

Google had been testing its e-mail service for about a year internally before deciding to offer it to the general public.

"We think e-mail is one of those things that is not as useful and as well organized as it should be," Page said. "People have been asking us to do this for a long time."

-JS-
04-01-2004, 01:08 PM
Probably an april fools - http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/s1078997.htm

Dave2986
04-01-2004, 02:08 PM
lots of people are saying it is an april foose thing, if it is then they have got a load of publisity about it http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/3588933.stm

pepsik
04-01-2004, 02:14 PM
looks official, look at the whois.

Domain Name: GMAIL.COM
Registrar: ALLDOMAINS.COM INC.
Whois Server: whois.alldomains.com
Referral URL: http://www.alldomains.com
Name Server: NS2.GOOGLE.COM
Name Server: NS1.GOOGLE.COM
Name Server: NS3.GOOGLE.COM
Name Server: NS4.GOOGLE.COM
Status: REGISTRAR-LOCK
Updated Date: 31-mar-2004
Creation Date: 13-aug-1995
Expiration Date: 12-aug-2006

Neo
04-01-2004, 03:25 PM
Marketing scheme. They didn't release the small print yet.

Elaine
04-01-2004, 03:30 PM
There's quite a bit of small print located HERE (http://www.google.com/gmail/help/about.html). So far I'm not very convinced though.

Neo
04-01-2004, 03:32 PM
Good find, it wasn't up yesterday. But there has to be something more too it... It is just too good to be true.

kyle5077
04-01-2004, 04:46 PM
Blah...ever notise how the to good to be true stories come ot on April 1st?
Ill believe it when i have a 1gb account on their server...

PhilEnfield
04-01-2004, 05:27 PM
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/s1079369.htm

Elaine
04-01-2004, 05:55 PM
The cost alone is going to be astronomical. Perhaps they don't believe that anyone is going to use their 1 GB. Yet just letting all the old mail remain on the server, and allowing users to fully search it... I just don't get it. Especially since Google just recently went public, they now have shareholders to contend with.

pepsik
04-01-2004, 06:19 PM
The cost alone is going to be astronomical. Perhaps they don't believe that anyone is going to use their 1 GB. Yet just letting all the old mail remain on the server, and allowing users to fully search it... I just don't get it. Especially since Google just recently went public, they now have shareholders to contend with.
They also have to contend with the other major search engines, the two biggest being yahoo and msn which offer variable services other than a search. Going public probably created this scenario, because investors bring their money and their thoughts with them. It's a damn shame though, the simple white background and little search box will eventually look like the clutter of msn and yahoo :(

Elaine
04-01-2004, 06:27 PM
Oh, I hope not! :( Google's been my home page and best friend for years. Ever since Dogpile quit including Google, which incited at least a few nasty mails from me at the time.

I refuse to go to MSN or Yahoo. If I even try, I need to reset my firewall, ect so I can even view anything. :mad:

smokafatty
04-01-2004, 07:44 PM
Google has programmed its computers to dissect the topics being discussed in the e-mails and then deliver text-based ads related to the subjects. Doesn't anyone think that sounds fishy?


I don't see why 1gb is such a big deal how often do you need an email from a few years ago?

I just switched over to www.mailblocks.com (http://www.mailblocks.com), 5mb of storage, 6mb attachments, and 5 trackers. I guess I just don't see 1gb of space that important.

aciras
04-06-2004, 02:14 AM
If it sounds too good to be true, then watch out. Probably crazy advertising comes with this 1gb. 1gb seems like a lot, and possibilites of uploading illegal content is there (think newsgroup broken files).