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Google Mail is becoming Gmail in the UK

41 points| ukdm | 16 years ago |gmailblog.blogspot.com | reply

"Since "gmail" is 50% fewer characters than "googlemail," we estimate this name change will save approximately 60 million keystrokes a day. At about 217 microjoules per keystroke, that's about the energy of 20 bonbons saved every day!"

22 comments

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[+] ukdm|16 years ago|reply
From the post:

"Since "gmail" is 50% fewer characters than "googlemail," we estimate this name change will save approximately 60 million keystrokes a day. At about 217 microjoules per keystroke, that's about the energy of 20 bonbons saved every day!"

But seriously, glad this trademark dispute finally got sorted out.

[+] ashleyw|16 years ago|reply
We've always been able to give our email as @gmail.com (I have), but any email we send comes from @googlemail.com, which is obviously always a headache for support tickets and such.

I'm glad they've finally got this dispute sorted out.

[+] invisible|16 years ago|reply
What happens if you add a "Send mail as" address with @gmail.com?
[+] shrikant|16 years ago|reply
A few notes here (AFAIK):

- All gmail.com and googlemail.com addresses are (and have always been) interchange-able (go on, try it out)

- The only noticeable impacts this will have is what gets displayed in the Gmail logo on the top of the window, and what gets displayed as the email address in your Gtalk profile popup

- I've noticed that regardless of where (geographically) I log in from, if the system locale is set to en_GB, it redirects to a Google Mail page.

[+] Torn|16 years ago|reply
I'm affected by this -- can't find the page where I can change to @gmail.com though. Any ideas?
[+] ukdm|16 years ago|reply
It's not becoming available until later this month. I'm sure Google will send UK users an e-mail about it.
[+] tome|16 years ago|reply
Hang on, what's the story here?

Did they formerly detect signups from the UK somehow, and force them to use @googlemail, whereas international signups were allowed @gmail?

If so, how bizarre.

[+] DrJokepu|16 years ago|reply
Yes, if you signed up from the UK, GMail used to display [email protected] instead of [email protected]. Both versions worked though, so if someone sent you an email to [email protected] you still received it, it was just an UI thing really.

I'm not sure how whether they used IP geolocation or the country you specified when you signed up to decide if you're in the UK or not.

[+] RossM|16 years ago|reply
I've been using both on my (UK) account without any difficulty, does this only change what's displayed in the upper right corner?
[+] watmough|16 years ago|reply
What happens when someone has a name on a googlemail account, and that name was already taken in the gmail beta on the original gmail rollout in the US?

I'd be really interested if someone from Google could address this.

[+] watmough|16 years ago|reply
At the risk of losing even more karma, I took a look at the google help, and someone in the UK has been occasionally using my email (his full name - same as mine) instead of his proper email address (shortened version of name).

Google actually are addressing this by annotating emails to you with (yes, this is you), when a non-primary email address for your account is used.

Thanks Google.

[+] thehodge|16 years ago|reply
if your in the UK using @gmail.com has always worked in the past so it makes no real difference, its just that they can tell people about it now.
[+] Torn|16 years ago|reply
Has always worked for inbound mail, not outgoing.

Posterous, for example, doesn't have an account verification email process. Outgoing gmail is sent from @googlemail.com so that's the email address you have to sign in with to the posterous site, and not '@gmail.com' which confused the hell out of me for a little while.