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Gmail to charge for storage
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It has been a few years coming, but at long last the Google operated, web-based, free Gmail email service has lifted the crazy invitation only restriction. As from today you can simply click on a link from the Google home page and join in the fun of easily searchable email with that all important 2.8GB of online storage space thrown in.
Sergey Brin, one of the Google co-founders, has gone on record to say that Gmail is a cornerstone for the company. And rightly so, when you take into account the advertising revenue it generates by displaying context sensitive adverts alongside email messages but without ever really interfering with the user experience. Of course, the importance of Gmail goes beyond being a simple cash cow, it is at the heart of the integrated software services policy that Google has been promoting for some time now, bringing together Google Calendar and Google Talk IM for example.
But a cash cow it is, and with this latest announcement comes the news that it will become n even bigger one. It’s OK, don’t panic, there are no immediate plans to start charging for the basic service which will remain free according to Brin. However, note that I said ‘basic’ service there. Brin has made it clear that there are plans to charge for additional storage capacity, with an annual fee levied if you want to dramatically boost your online data store. Although no firm figures have been released, I am led to believe that a ballpark yearly charge of $25 for 6GB through to $500 for a 250GB is not too wide of the mark. Not least because these figures tie in quite nicely with the charging structure for the Google owned Picasa photo hosting service.
So just how many people actually use Gmail already? That’s an interesting question, and one that many people have been attempting to answer ever since the Google email revolution started. The latest figures from comScore suggest that Google is behind both Microsoft Hotmail and Yahoo, but has zipped past AOL into the third spot. This is not as brilliant as it sounds, because Hotmail is placed second on 236 million, with Yahoo in front on 249 million. Where does Gmail sit in all this? 200 million? Nope. 150 million? Nien. 100 million? Niet.
According to comScore it is just 60 million which means it has a lot of ground to cover if it is to truly compete at the top of the webmail pile. Given that Gmail launched way back on April Fool’s day 2004, one might have expected it to have done better. But then there has been that ‘invitation only’ hurdle to jump which has undoubtedly held it back in sheer user volume terms.
One thing is for sure, only a fool would bet against Google gaining ground, market position and bottom line profit…
Sergey Brin, one of the Google co-founders, has gone on record to say that Gmail is a cornerstone for the company. And rightly so, when you take into account the advertising revenue it generates by displaying context sensitive adverts alongside email messages but without ever really interfering with the user experience. Of course, the importance of Gmail goes beyond being a simple cash cow, it is at the heart of the integrated software services policy that Google has been promoting for some time now, bringing together Google Calendar and Google Talk IM for example.
But a cash cow it is, and with this latest announcement comes the news that it will become n even bigger one. It’s OK, don’t panic, there are no immediate plans to start charging for the basic service which will remain free according to Brin. However, note that I said ‘basic’ service there. Brin has made it clear that there are plans to charge for additional storage capacity, with an annual fee levied if you want to dramatically boost your online data store. Although no firm figures have been released, I am led to believe that a ballpark yearly charge of $25 for 6GB through to $500 for a 250GB is not too wide of the mark. Not least because these figures tie in quite nicely with the charging structure for the Google owned Picasa photo hosting service.
So just how many people actually use Gmail already? That’s an interesting question, and one that many people have been attempting to answer ever since the Google email revolution started. The latest figures from comScore suggest that Google is behind both Microsoft Hotmail and Yahoo, but has zipped past AOL into the third spot. This is not as brilliant as it sounds, because Hotmail is placed second on 236 million, with Yahoo in front on 249 million. Where does Gmail sit in all this? 200 million? Nope. 150 million? Nien. 100 million? Niet.
According to comScore it is just 60 million which means it has a lot of ground to cover if it is to truly compete at the top of the webmail pile. Given that Gmail launched way back on April Fool’s day 2004, one might have expected it to have done better. But then there has been that ‘invitation only’ hurdle to jump which has undoubtedly held it back in sheer user volume terms.
One thing is for sure, only a fool would bet against Google gaining ground, market position and bottom line profit…
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I thought that gmail had already gotten rid of the invite system but to sign up you had to put in a mobile number so that they could send you a verification code
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Google is a fantastic,innovative,electrifying group and they are gonna beat out all their competitors in the long run....
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lasher511: not in Europe, as far as I am aware...
indianscorpion2: do you like Google then?
indianscorpion2: do you like Google then?

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Google is far from a fantastic group, they're extremely dangerous.
The amount of data they collect on people is massive, with no guarantees about protecting the privacy of those people in any way.
If a government were to do a fraction of what Google does the civil rights movement would be up in arms about it, and rightly so.
That's why I've blocked all traffic to Google on my machines. Their DNS entries are redirected to a localhost so nothing ever leaks back to them.
The amount of data they collect on people is massive, with no guarantees about protecting the privacy of those people in any way.
If a government were to do a fraction of what Google does the civil rights movement would be up in arms about it, and rightly so.
That's why I've blocked all traffic to Google on my machines. Their DNS entries are redirected to a localhost so nothing ever leaks back to them.
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Many don't find his view extreme at all. I think it's a realistic look at Google.
Whatever good they've done by providing revenue vehicles for legitimate sites like this has to balanced against the harm they've done to the web in general.
They have intentionally created a mystique and tremendous hype. They do very little advertising, and yet many use "Google" as a synonym for "search". They have co-opted the web, so that every web page becomes "their" content, which they monetize.
The store and analyze massive amounts of private correspondence.
They've made largely succesful attempts to ignore copyright laws on published books.
We've given Google the keys to all our content and data, or let them manufature their own "master key", with very little outcry, simply trusting their motives are always pure and their actions always good.
Google wants their engine to be the gate through which all content passes. When someone starts building gates around your property, perhaps an "extreme" reaction is the appropriate one.
Completely blocking Google is a reasonable response to the environment Google has created.
Whatever good they've done by providing revenue vehicles for legitimate sites like this has to balanced against the harm they've done to the web in general.
They have intentionally created a mystique and tremendous hype. They do very little advertising, and yet many use "Google" as a synonym for "search". They have co-opted the web, so that every web page becomes "their" content, which they monetize.
The store and analyze massive amounts of private correspondence.
They've made largely succesful attempts to ignore copyright laws on published books.
We've given Google the keys to all our content and data, or let them manufature their own "master key", with very little outcry, simply trusting their motives are always pure and their actions always good.
Google wants their engine to be the gate through which all content passes. When someone starts building gates around your property, perhaps an "extreme" reaction is the appropriate one.
Completely blocking Google is a reasonable response to the environment Google has created.
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Maybe you won't survive without Google Dani, but I can.
After all, they pay (at least in part) for your bills and so you may go hungry without them, but not for mine
There are other search engines, which often give more relevant results.
And if you've been online for a decade you have a repository of hundreds of sites (which sometimes turn out to be dead when you revisit them years later, truth be told) to get all kinds of information that's relevant to your regular work/hobbies and don't frequently use a general purpose search engine.
After all, they pay (at least in part) for your bills and so you may go hungry without them, but not for mine

There are other search engines, which often give more relevant results.
And if you've been online for a decade you have a repository of hundreds of sites (which sometimes turn out to be dead when you revisit them years later, truth be told) to get all kinds of information that's relevant to your regular work/hobbies and don't frequently use a general purpose search engine.
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Google certainly has a part to play in the whole search thing, it would be silly to suggest otherwise, but I have to agree that it is not the be all and end all of search as far as I am concerned. My search methodology day to day revolves around Copernic Agent Professional without which I would be lost, pretty much literally much of the time!
This searches across numerous sources and analyses the results for me. Takes a little bit longer than just hitting the button at Google, but the quality of results is worth waiting half a minute for.
For the vast majority of the Internet using public though, Google is and will remain the gateway to the web no matter what you or I say.
Well, until the new Google comes along that is. I remember when AltaVista looked unbreakable, and Yahoo...
This searches across numerous sources and analyses the results for me. Takes a little bit longer than just hitting the button at Google, but the quality of results is worth waiting half a minute for.
For the vast majority of the Internet using public though, Google is and will remain the gateway to the web no matter what you or I say.
Well, until the new Google comes along that is. I remember when AltaVista looked unbreakable, and Yahoo...
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