Gmail lets us directly add time references as Google Calendar events, finally

Gmail now lets you directly add Google Calendar events, logic finally takes hold

As tightly integrated as Google’s many services can be, the company has been dancing around a glaring omission: why couldn’t we add times mentioned in Gmail messages as Google Calendar events? Logic is at last taking hold in Mountain View, however. Starting this week for those using US English, Google is rolling out a Gmail web update that automatically underlines dates and times; click on one and it will pop up a box to quickly add a calendar event scheduled for that time, with an option to edit basic details first. It’s such a simple addition, but it could mean the world for those of us waiting for Gmail to catch up with our native email apps.

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Source: Official Gmail Blog

Microsoft finishes migrating Hotmail users to Outlook.com, adds direct SkyDrive sharing

Microsoft finishes migrating Hotmail users to Outlookcom, adds tighter SkyDrive sharing

When Microsoft took Outlook.com public, it also took on the rather daunting task of moving 300 million-plus Hotmail accounts over to the more modern infrastructure without drawing our wrath. However you feel about the new interface, that transition is at last complete: Outlook.com is now the sole front end for the over 400 million people who use Microsoft’s free email services. Both Hotmail.com addresses and Hotmail Plus accounts will keep working despite the switch, the company says.

To mark the occasion, Microsoft is launching two significant upgrades. It’s adding tighter SkyDrive integration that lets users attach files directly from their SkyDrive accounts, including optimized photo attachments. Those who rely on email aliases will also like that Microsoft has finally let us choose an SMTP server to send messages from non-Outlook addresses without revealing the true source — we won’t have to put up with “on behalf of” tags any longer. Both features are rolling out today.

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Source: Outlook Blog

Outlook.com transition complete: Hotmail is dead

Microsoft announced today that its slow transition from Hotmail to its new Outlook.com is now complete. Microsoft has replaced its aging Hotmail service with its new Outlook.com email site, moving over some 150 petabytes of emails and information is just six weeks, according to the company. It’s now official that Hotmail is dead.

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Microsoft also boasts that 400 million users are now using Outlook.com, which seems like a crazy amount of users for such a new service, but it got off to the right foot when over a million users signed up for Outlook.com within the first few hours. Of course, that could’ve just been to reserve the username that they wanted so that no one else would take it.

Microsoft first launched Outlook.com over the summer last year as a new email service that would eventually replace Hotmail and open the doors for more features to be included. Case in point: Microsoft announced two new features on Outlook.com today. Users now have SMTP available, so it’s easier to send email from different email addresses, and there’s also deeper integration with SkyDrive.

SkyDrive integration is no surprise, as we knew it was bound to happen at some point, but this will give Outlook.com users the ability to save attachments directly to their SkyDrive, as well as easily attach files to emails that are in SkyDrive. This is essentially the same thing that Google does with their Gmail and Google Drive services. If you want to learn more about Outlook.com, you can check out our hands-on of the service.


Outlook.com transition complete: Hotmail is dead is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Evomail for iPad set to enter the fray for control of your Gmail inbox

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Finally got off the reservation list for Mailbox? Now there’s another app trying to sway your Gmail loyalty that’s just arrived for iPad: Evomail. It brings “frictionless” support for Google’s mail client, including quick access to labels, trash and archives, full Gmail search, push notifications and social network sharing for Twitter or Facebook. While launching strictly on the iPad, the developers told us that versions for iPhone, then Android would follow, but that it’d only support Google’s mail service “at the moment.” If you think it might serve your Gmail needs better than, er, the free-of-charge Gmail app, it’s $2.99 at the source.

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Source: Evomail (iTunes)

Yahoo launches new Weather and Mail mobile apps

In an effort to build more presence in the mobile market, and continue with its redesign initiative, Yahoo has launched a couple of new apps. The company released Yahoo Weather for iPhone, and Yahoo Mail for the iPad and Android tablets. This marks the first time that Yahoo has released their own weather app, as well as their Mail app for tablets.

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First off, the Weather app looks amazingly gorgeous, and it’s easy to see why: the app integrates with the company’s Flickr photo-sharing service, allowing Yahoo to pull appropriate images from your area that represent the current weather situation and time of day. Honestly, we never thought Yahoo could be capable of such beauty.

As for the Mail app, it’s already been available for smartphones for quite some time, but it’s now optimized for tablets of both the Android and iOS variety. Yahoo says they wanted the Mail app to act like a digital magazine, so there are no folders, no buttons, and no tabs. It’s essentially “just you and your mail.”

The Weather app for iPhone is now live in the iTunes App Store, although some people may still not see it, so it seems to be rolling out slowly. As for the Mail app for tablets, it’s available now in iTunes and is compatible with the full-size iPad and the iPad mini. The app is also live in the Google Play store for Android tablets.


Yahoo launches new Weather and Mail mobile apps is written by Craig Lloyd & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Outlook.com lets you sign in with an alias, adds 32 international email domains

Aside from the two-step verification feature revealed yesterday, Microsoft also rolled out a pair of updates for Outlook.com that are decidedly less important but welcome nonetheless. Namely, users are now able to sign in via a new alias instead of their initial username, and they can add a bit of international flair to their Outlook address with any of 32 new country-specific domains as well. It still might not have the support of trendy email apps, but at least Outlook seems to be trying to improve itself.

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Source: Outlook Blog

Mailbox 1.2 drops the reservation system, opens up to all iOS users

Mailbox 12 for iOS drops the reservation system

Mailbox for iOS launched with much fanfare in the winter, but it also drew more than a little flak for its reservation-based access system: it’s hard to get jazzed for an alternative Gmail app when you’re 297,045th in line to use it. The developer now believes that it has the capacity to handle new users as they come in, so it’s pulling back the velvet ropes with its app’s 1.2 update. Mailbox isn’t just shedding notions of pseudo-exclusivity with the new revision, however. It’s also improving swipe speed, introducing more time-sensitive message snoozes and slipping in a handful of minor UI tricks. Although some may lament the sudden rush of commoners into a once-elite club, we’d say 1.2 is an auspicious start to Mailbox’s life in the Dropbox era.

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Via: Mailbox, SlashGear

Source: App Store

New Documents Suggest the IRS Reads Your Emails Without a Warrant

Everyone knows the IRS is our nation’s tax collector, but it is also a law enforcement organization tasked with investigating criminal violations of the tax laws. New documents released to the ACLU under the Freedom of Information Act reveal that the IRS Criminal Tax Division has long taken the position that the IRS can read your emails without a warrant-a practice that one appeals court has said violates the Fourth Amendment (and we think most Americans would agree). More »

IRS believes it can read your emails, chats, and more without a warrant

Looks like the IRS believes it can read your emails, Facebook Chats, Twitter Direct Messages, SMS messages, and more without needing to obtain a search warrant beforehand. However, a ruling in the 2010 case, U.S. v. Warshak, by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals states that accessing someone’s email messages without obtaining a warrant first violates the Fourth Amendment.
IRS states that it can read your emails without a warrant

According to an IRS 2009 Search Warrant Handbook discovered by the American Civil Liberties Union, the IRS says,

“Emails and other transmissions generally lose their reasonable expectation of privacy and thus their Fourth Amendment protection once they have been sent from an individual’s computer.”

The ACLU says that under the currently outdated Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA), if an email is in an email provider’s server for more than 180 days, or has been opened, it does not require a warrant to access. Authorities can access the emails with just an administrative subpoena. Luckily, the ruling in the U.S v. Warshak protects individuals from unreasonable searches by the government. However, the main fear is whether or not the IRS would be abiding by the Warshak ruling throughout the entire country, or if its only going to be abiding by it throughout the Sixth Circuit.

When the IRS issued edits to its Internal Revenue Manual in March 2011, one year after the Warshak ruling, it still decided to keep its original policy. The manual states that under ECPA,

Investigators can obtain everything in an account except for unopened e-mail or voice mail stored with a provider for 180 days or less using a [relevant-and-material-standard]court order.

Even on today’s date, the Internal Revenue Manual retains the same policy that a warrant is not required to search emails stored for more than 180 days. The IRS strongly believes that emails, or any form of communication held in electronic storage, is not protected by the Fourth Amendment. Back in 2009, the IRS Criminal Tax Division’s Office of Chief Counsel stated,

“The Fourth Amendment does not protect communications held in electronic storage, such as email messages stored on a server, because internet users do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in such communications.”

The office echoed its stance in 2010 at a presentation, stating, “4th Amendment Does Not Protect Emails Stored on Server.” Luckily for us, a lot of companies are all fighting to protect your information and your rights. Amazon, Apple, AT&T, eBay, Google, Intel, Microsoft, Twitter, and many advocacy groups have all asked Congress to update the ECPA to make it clear to the IRS, and other authorities, that they need warrants to access someone’s private, electronic conversations.

[via CNET]


IRS believes it can read your emails, chats, and more without a warrant is written by Brian Sin & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

The Email Guitar Lets You Shred Your Way To Responding To Correspondences

If you were impressed with David Neevel’s previous contraption which was able to separate the cream from an OREO cookie, then you’re going to dig his latest project called the Email Guitar.

Instead of sitting behind a computer screen all day and using an archaic input method like the keyboard to type in all of your correspondences, you’ll be able to shred your way into a perfectly constructed email as the Email Guitar translates the notes played on a guitar to its corresponding letter on a keyboard. The results of Neevel’s experiment certainly looks cool, but we can’t imagine responding to an urgent email as you fumble your way through a sentence.

The Email Guitar was brought together with a combination of a Flying V guitar, an Arduino, a custom relay board and a Roland GR-33 guitar synthesizer. If you happen to have all of those at your computer desk right now and feel like creating an Email Guitar of your own, Neevel posted plans and code to help. Just remember to send him a “Thank You” email when you’re fighting off waves of women who are totally into your emailing methods.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Man Solves Three Rubik’s Cubes While Juggling, 10-Ton Meteorite Crashes In Russia Injuring Nearly 1,000 People,