|
|
Go Back
Add your review for GMail
Showing 20 results for GMail     
|
     | Guest |
| March 10, 2010 |
| Excellent, especially with the add-on "Labs" |
|
     | Guest |
| October 4, 2009 |
| Gmail is my mail center for all other mail accounts. I can't live without it. |
|
     | Crusader |
| June 29, 2008 |
| No competition; definitely the BEST free web-based e-mail application available! |
|
     | Guest |
| November 8, 2007 |
| The best spam filter I have ever tried. Also a lot of storage and a user-friendly interface. |
|
     | Guest |
| April 4, 2007 |
| simply the best! |
|
     | Guest |
| May 18, 2006 |
Tries to do too much. Slow and ponderous.
A lot of the features aren't even helpful, just
"bloaty." Either Gmail or Yahoo won't deliver my mail to each other, maybe both (Like hotmail won't
even let you store a Yahoo address!) I use it due to lots of storage space, IF you can ever sift
thru the muck to find it again. |
|
     | Guest |
| January 15, 2006 |
| Not all it's cracked up to be. It is awkwardly set up. To Google's credit they are trying to offer you something different, but who wants to search for EVERY email. Let's put some folders in there. I use mine for storage and because of the free Pop3 |
|
     | Guest |
| October 11, 2005 |
I use gmail for a couple of months and the overall experience is good. The only problem I found is that gmail rejects *.RAR archives which is annoying but it does not stop me from using it. Google constantly expands space for emails.
rafciu123 |
|
     | Guest |
| September 23, 2005 |
| Great! SPAM filter works even with Japanese mail (I experienced no false positives or negatives till now), storage will grow up to around 3000 MB, _fast_ web-mail interface, you need the SSL plugin to access it via POP Peeper. Attachment limit: 10 MB |
|
     | Guest |
| September 6, 2005 |
| great one!!!! |
|
     | Guest |
| September 2, 2005 |
| Excellent - no doubt only 4/5 because the POP doesn't work! |
|
     | dyinginavan |
| August 22, 2005 |
| Excellent interface, smooth functionality, plenty of storage and an overall winner! |
|
     | blind_phantom |
| June 20, 2005 |
GMail, one of the most highly anticipated Webmail services has finally become available to the public. But, does it deliver?
Yes, I believe it does. Its not perfect by any means, but it still is a great WebMail provider. Here are the Pros and Cons of GMail:
Pros:
Great storage. 2.3 gigs and counting (you have to love the counter on the GMail home), this is one of the best storage solutions around. Gmail has more space right now then what is free on my hard drive.
Simple interface, which might be a little to so, is easy to look at. Everything is clean and readable.
It is free! You can't beat that when it comes to price. Some of us have been spoiled with Hotmail and Yahoo services, but don't take this for granted.
Attachements are a snap to add to an email. I love that you can see all that you have put in your mail, and change them.
Cons:
Sometimes the interface is a bit too simple. Where you expect the delete button is something else. Just needs a bit of fine tuning.
A bit feature light. I would have liked to see a better intergration of Google's other services into GMail. That would have been great.
I would also have liked a way to transfer all my emails from my Hotmail account to GMail. Maybe in the future.
Overall, GMail is awesome, but its not perfect. Its large storage and easy interface is great, but a few more features are needed to win me over completly. If you are new to the email scene (who is these days?) or you are ready to switch over to something better, give GMail a serious test. But, if you are with a few hundred, of thousand, emails of another provider that you have used for a while, try before you commit. |
|
     | Guest |
| June 8, 2005 |
| Excellent Service |
|
     | Guest |
| May 30, 2005 |
| You wont need an email program installed on your computer with this. It is simple, but has all the necessary features wrapped in a great design. |
|
     | guitarbug |
| May 30, 2005 |
| good webmail |
|
     | Guest |
| May 30, 2005 |
| It's OK |
|
     | Guest |
| May 30, 2005 |
Together with Yahoo, the best I have used so far.
It\'s very fast, lightweight and javascript intensive, so pages load quickly and feel closer to a local client than any other email client.
Has very large storage space (which has indeed pushed other mail service providers to increase theirs too).
Offers secure POP3 (mail download) and SMTP access (send mail) as well, but take into account they run over standard SSH ports, which may be blocked by your corporate firewall (it is my case), so Gmail access via POP Peeper is not an option for me and other people in this situation.
Another drawback is that Gmail has a flat storage model, hence there are no folders nor levels of storing a message. This way, if you have 1000 messages in your inbox, they will appear to POP Peeper as available even though they are no more shown in the Indox view. This can be annoying and slows down POP Peeper considerably. A solution is to enable the \"Don\'t show in All accounts view\" option for the Gmail account. |
|
     | war1 |
| May 30, 2005 |
Gmail has started the email storage war, and Yahoo, Hotmail, and other services are following. Gmail access is fast but sometimes unstable. Gmail uses javascript in their webmail code to make navigation much faster than Yahoo and Hotmail. The ads are text ads, so they do not take as much time to load as graphical ads. Gmail has free POP3 and SMTP access, some unique features such as conversations (threading of like emails) and labeling, and great search capability.
But Gmail lacks some features like calendar and easy access to contact addresses in compose view. Because of many users accessing Gmail, POP3, SMTP and even webmail accesses are not always reliable. Service is in beta, so unexplain glitches occurs. Gmail Support is mostly canned replies.
If desirable features are added or stability improves, I will revised this review. |
|
     | Guest |
| May 30, 2005 |
| One of the best free e-mail services around today. |
|
Go Back
|