Google Gets E-Mail

Published: 2 April 2004 y., Friday
The company is testing Gmail, a free, ad-supported Web-based e-mail service that leverages the company's dominance in search. The move pits Google even more strongly against Yahoo! and Microsoft, both of which offer extremely popular free e-mail services. It also more firmly establishes Google as a portal, rather than simply a search destination. The Mountain View, Calif.-based company says a "handful" of users are currently testing the Webmail service, built on the idea that e-mail should be easy to search and store. Gmail organizes messages by "conversations" that show messages in the context of the replies sent in response to them, the company said. Google is also boasting about the spam-fighting capabilities of the service, and the unprecedented storage capacity of 1 gigabyte. A formal release date hasn't yet been set. "We're trying to fundamentally change the way people use mail," said Jonathan Rosenberg, vice president of products at Google. Rosenberg explained the company wants to free people from the need to file e-mail or deciding what should be deleted and what should be kept. To do that, he said, "you have to marry search with a very, very deep storage level." Google intends to include contextually targeted advertising within the Web e-mail client, a move likely to raise privacy concerns. To target ads, Google's technology will scan the text of the e-mail, map the content to a keyword, and serve an AdWords ad accordingly. The technique is similar to what Google uses for its AdSense program, which distributes ads to publisher sites. Anticipating concerns, Google assures users computers, not humans, analyze e-mail content to determine what ads to serve.
Šaltinis: ClickZ News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Web Influences Offline Purchases, Especially Among Teens

The growth rate of e-commerce sales has begun to slow from its torrid pace of recent years, but online consumers continue to use the Web for shopping, if not buying. more »

The Internet store

The company ``Lattelekom`` opened the Internet store ``www.collectoria.lv`` more »

NTL and Telewest working together to build Broadband Britain

9 million homes ready for broadband now. By end 2002, 11.6 million homes will be broadband-capable more »

Online Shopping a Tough Sell for Online Retailers

A study of more than 4,000 Web users by Brigham Young University (BYU) found that Internet retailers need to re-target their marketing, address customer fears over credit card security and make the experience less technologically challenging. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

SAP Evicts Cybersquatter

The World Intellectual Property Rights Organization has ordered India-based cybersquatter D. P.Singh Bhatia to transfer the domain names Sapmaster.com and Sapwizard.com to the German multinational e-business concern, SAP AG. more »

Korea Plans For Broadband Everywhere By 2005

The Korean government aims to have 84 percent of the nation's households accessing the Internet at a super-fast 20 megabits per second (Mbps) by 2005. more »

Jupiter's report

Mobile commerce to remain a niche more »

Alcatel reveals innovative One Touch 511 mobile

Alcatel gave the world its first tantalizing preview of the new One Touch 511 mobile phone, set to be on the market in early July. more »

Tilde's Internet Dictionary

English-Latvian-English base dictionary contains 41 802 English words, 29 947 English expressions and 86 442 Latvian words. more »