http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/040331/315958_1.html


Amidst rampant media speculation, Google Inc. today announced it is
testing a preview release of Gmail -- a free search-based webmail
service with a storage capacity of up to eight billion bits of
information, the equivalent of 500,000 pages of email. Per user.
The inspiration for Gmail came from a Google user complaining about
the poor quality of existing email services, recalled Larry Page,
Google co-founder and president, Products. "She kvetched about
spending all her time filing messages or trying to find them," Page
said. "And when she's not doing that, she has to delete email like
crazy to stay under the obligatory four megabyte limit. So she asked,
'Can't you people fix this?'"

The idea that there could be a better way to handle email caught the
attention of a Google engineer who thought it might be a good "20
percent time" project. (Google requires engineers to spend a day a
week on projects that interest them, unrelated to their day jobs).
Millions of M&Ms later, Gmail was born.

"If a Google user has a problem with email, well, so do we," said
Google co-founder and president of technology, Sergey Brin. "And while
developing Gmail was a bit more complicated than we anticipated, we're
pleased to be able to offer it to the user who asked for it."

Added Page, "Gmail solves all of my communication needs. It's fast and
easy and has all the storage I need. And I can use it from anywhere. I
love it!"

Today, a handful of users will begin testing the preview version of
Gmail. Unlike other free webmail services, Gmail is built on the idea
that users should never have to file or delete a message, or struggle
to find an email they've sent or received. Key features of Gmail
include:

  a.. Search: Built on Google search technology, Gmail enables people
to quickly search every email they've ever sent or received. Using
keywords or advanced search features, Gmail users can find what they
need, when they need it.
  b.. Storage: Google believes people should be able to hold onto
their mail forever. That's why Gmail comes with 1,000 megabytes (1
gigabyte) of free storage -- more than 100 times what most other free
webmail services offer.
  c.. Speed: Gmail makes using email faster and more efficient by
eliminating the need to file messages into folders, and by
automatically organizing individual emails into meaningful
"conversations" that show messages in the context of all the replies
sent in response to them. And it turns annoying spam e-mail messages
into the equivalent of canned meat.
According to Page and Brin, Google will make the preview test version
of Gmail available to a small number of email aficionados. With luck,
Gmail will prove popular to them -- and to the original user who
sparked the idea.

Those interested in learning more about Gmail can visit
http://gmail.google.com.





xponent

Sergey Maru

rob


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