Gmail for Android's Google Material Theme isn't radical, put something aside for one new component

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Subsequent to refreshing to variant 9.1 (from 8.x), the new Gmail invites clients to the "new look." Tapping "Next" will promptly surface the new "Pick a view" choice where clients can choose between Default, Comfortable, and Compact. This alternative is accessible after setup in Settings > General settings > Conversation list thickness.  "Default" will list included email connections directly in the essential inbox see. Clients can snap to open an archive or photograph promptly, with the pill-molded marker highlighting a record type symbol and name. This is astoundingly helpful for speedy access to tickets and different passes.  "Agreeable" is about indistinguishable, yet with connections just signified by the standard paperclip symbol alongside the time/day/date in the upper-right corner. In the mean time, "Conservative" replaces profile pictures at the left with check boxes for mass choice and expels much al

Google to include additional Gmail security … by building a walled cultivate

Comment Google is planning to add several new security features to its ubiquitous email service, Gmail, but they will come with a cost – literally and figuratively.

Among the new features reportedly under consideration are self-deleting emails and a new "confidentiality mode" that would prevent emails from being printed or forwarded.
i forgot my gmail password
While those would seem to be useful features, the question of course is: how would it actually work? And the answer of course is: by pulling Gmail into a walled garden, away from open email protocols and into a special Google system where the Chocolate Factory controls everything.

If you receive an email from someone using a Gmail address and also use Gmail to receive and send email, then the system will appear pretty seamless. It will simply vanish and/or not allow you to forward or print.

But if you pull email into a different email program, you will instead be presented with a link to the Gmail message. That link allows Google to control what happens to that email (which, of course, the user will decide) but it comes at a cost: open standards and email.

It also not clear whether this feature will be rolled out to users of the free Gmail service or will be something only made available to users of Google's corporate, paid-for G Suite.

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