MOUNTAIN VIEW, California (AP) -- Search engine Google Inc. announced Wednesday it will launch a free, Web-based e-mail service to compete against popular services from rivals Yahoo! Inc. and Microsoft Corp.
Google's service, called "Gmail," will include a built-in search function that will let people search every e-mail they've ever sent or received.
According to company executives, users will be able to type in keywords to sort e-mails or find old missives. And it will come with 1 gigabyte of free storage - more than 100 times what some popular rivals offer and enough to hold 500,000 pages of e-mail.
The service is being offered to invited users, and will be available to everyone in a few weeks, the company said.
Officials at Yahoo and Microsoft's Hotmail division declined to comment on Google's entry into a new category.
But analysts said that Google -- whose technology is behind nearly four out of every five Web searches -- could shake up the free e-mail market.
Yahoo dominates the niche, with 52.6 million unique users per month in the United States, according to a February survey by online research firm comScore Media Metrix. Hotmail is next, with 45.4 million users. AOL has 40.2 million paying users.
To finance the service, Google will display advertising links tied to the topics discussed within the e-mails. For instance, an e-mail inquiring about an upcoming concert might include an ad from a ticket agency.
Industry analyst David Ferris said Gmail is a logical extension of the world's most popular search engine. But he said Google may run into trouble if it tries to charge for e-mail eventually.
Rivals have kept stripped versions of e-mail free and asked users to pay annual fees up to $30 or more for extra storage and spam protection.
"I know that companies offering free e-mail are very frustrated because the consumer expects it will stay free -- they simply will not pay any money for them," said Ferris, president of San Francisco-based Ferris Research. "Although there's a clear tendency for these free services to offer for-fee extensions, users are very resistant to taking them up. The level of adoption is very disappointing."
Some site has beaten Google to the 1G email capacity.
Kaso may occassional hang-ups pa yung site, kahapon hindi ma-retrieve ng Outlook ang mails ko. From what I read, their site was not set to accomodate more than 150,000 users kaya nagloko. Pero ok na naman kaninang umaga. Di ko nga lang nasusubukan kung totoong sagarang 1G nga ang capacity.
Secret muna yung site, baka biglang dumugin, hahaha! Pag pinilit nyo ko sasabihin ko na rin.
Gmail is an experiment in a new kind of webmail, built on the idea that you should never have to delete mail and you should always be able to find the message you want. The key features are:
* Search, don't sort.
Use Google search to find the exact message you want, no matter when it was sent or received.
*Don't throw anything away.
1000 megabytes of free storage so you'll never need to delete another message.
*Keep it all in context.
Each message is grouped with all its replies and displayed as a conversation.
*No pop-up ads. No banners.
You see only relevant text ads and links to related web pages of interest.
Originally posted by Ungas Some site has beaten Google to the 1G email capacity.
Kaso may occassional hang-ups pa yung site, kahapon hindi ma-retrieve ng Outlook ang mails ko. From what I read, their site was not set to accomodate more than 150,000 users kaya nagloko. Pero ok na naman kaninang umaga. Di ko nga lang nasusubukan kung totoong sagarang 1G nga ang capacity.
Secret muna yung site, baka biglang dumugin, hahaha! Pag pinilit nyo ko sasabihin ko na rin.
meron ako nyan i was invited by my sister, invitation nga lang siya sa ngayon since beta testing pa lang. mabilis din siya and text based lang like their search engine. i've used 31% of my 1000mb inbox. by the way, the maximum file that you can send is 10mb (as far as i know). i think i still have 1 invitation left, sino me gusto? unahan na lang kyo... hehehe