Google Reimagines Email With Its New "Inbox" App
GOOGLE
has released a new Gmail app called Inbox,which appears to combine
the look and feel of Google services with the automated,
bother-me-later philosophy of Mailbox.
So
what does Inbox actually do? On the surface level, it gives Gmail a
true Material Design makeover, with the card-based UI elements,
smooth animations, and clean typography. Like Gmail, it will also
sort emails by topic--things like Promos, Purchases, Social and
Travel-- but will allow you to dismiss entire groups of email with a
single swipe.
The
more enticing features, however leverage thespy level inteligence of
Google Now, and those neat auto-summary cards you see in Google
Search, to give you a highlight reel view of your email. For
instance, when you receive a flight confirmation email, Inbox will
simply display all of your flight’s basic information along with a
link to check-in, rather than forcing you to tap into the email to
pull out this basic info.
You
can also add Reminders to the top of your inbox, allowing you to
formalize a list of emails more formally into what it really is (your
to-do list!). Within Inbox, you can actually remind yourself to make
call a certain restaurant when they open. And that restaurant’s
name, location, and phone number will sit on top of your inbox as a
clean card until you call.
This
might seem like a very small feature, but when you consider that
Google allows you to remind yourself of something throughan Android
Wear Watch--like, "remind me to buy flowers on the way
home"--and then have Google Now message your phone as you drive
by a flower shop during your evening commute, you can recognize just
how integral Google views Reminders in its, and your, future. Gmail
could be main dashboard where you keep track of them all.
It’s
easy to forget that the original Gmail changed email through UX
tricks similar to reminders: starred and threaded
conversations,smarter algoritms that prioritized your inbox by
floating important messages to the top, and, of course, innovations
like itssearch function that actually found what you wanted and the
unprecedented 1GB of free storage (which, yes, feels so silly to say
today).
n
this regard, Inbox seems like Gmail’s spiritual successor. As part
of an invite-only beta program, Inbox not only invade iOS and Android
devices, but web browsers as well.
Having
not tried it for ourselves yet, we can't say if Inbox is a worthy
Gmail enchancement.
http://www.fastcodesign.com/3037483/google-reimagines-email-with-their-new-inbox-app?utm_source
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