Internet Tips: Gmail to the Max--Helpful Tips, Tricks, and Hacks
Learn to use Gmail's features to their fullest potential.
Scott Spanbauer
Google's free, feature-laden, and still-evolving Gmail service does more than just e-mail. These tips and tweaks let you customize Gmail to manage and organize your files from any browser.
Get notified in your browser: Google's nifty Gmail Notifier utility sits in your system tray and checks for new mail at regular intervals. But if your system tray runneth over, and you are using Firefox, you can receive notifications right in the browser's status bar, through Doron Rosenberg's identically named Gmail Notifier add-on software (see Figure 1).
Filter messages with custom addresses and aliases: Like any decent e-mail system, Gmail lets you set up filters that act on incoming mail based on criteria you set up. For example, you can create a filter that stars all messages from rjsquirrel@frostbitefalls.com and forwards them to every other e-mail account you use. Click Settings, Filters, Create a new filter, and follow the instructions. For more information on filters, click Help, and choose Filters under 'Common Mail Tasks and Features' to get a quick, complete tutorial.
Another convenient Gmail feature is its ability to use aliases. You can filter your incoming mail by adding a plus sign (+) and any extra characters (no spaces) to your address. For example, when you register with the Frostbite Falls Tribune site, submit an address similar to 'scott+tribune@gmail.com'. Or provide your boss with an address like 'scott+deadline@gmail.com'. Now, you can create filters that will label, star, archive (skipping the inbox), or forward only those incoming messages. And should the cash-starved folks at the Tribune sell your e-mail address to marketers, you can change your filter to redirect messages addressed to 'scott+tribune@gmail.com' to your Spam folder. (Note that 'scott@gmail.com' isn't a legitimate address because Gmail requires that user names have at least six characters.)
Start using those gigabytes: Gmail continuously informs you that you have lots of storage space available--I had 2.66GB at my disposal as I wrote this--but most of us will probably never use even half that space for messages. Several tools let you use a Gmail account for Web-based file storage or backup. Contrary to a rumor posted on Wikipedia, neither service described below violates Gmail's terms of use or program policies.
Bjarke Viksoe's Gmail Drive adds Gmail to Windows Explorer as a storage device, permitting you to drag and drop files to and from Google's servers, where they are stored as e-mail attachments. Rahul Jonna's Gmail Space is similar, but it works as a Firefox extension that converts the browser into a file-transfer utility to shuttle documents between your hard disk and Gmail (see Figure 2). When you create a filter that sends Gmail Space files to a specific Gmail folder (every file that Gmail Space uploads is attached to a message whose subject is prefixed with 'GSPACE'), you keep your inbox clear of your stored files automatically. Note that the current version of Gmail Space conflicts with the NoScript Firefox extension.
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