Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. A new tool for Gmail lets you quickly schedule meetings. The 'Offer times you're free,' feature lets users highlight their ...
Gmail’s Smart Replies are getting personalized with help from Gemini. The replies will match your tone and pull context from past emails and Google Drive. Appointment scheduling is also getting ...
Your Gmail inbox is probably drowning in subscription emails right now. Shopping deals, newsletters, app notifications, and promotional messages pile up faster than you can delete them. Gmail's ...
“Help me schedule” launched last year as way to partially automate meeting coordination between a pair of participants. Google’s now expanding the tool to support more than just two people in a ...
Q: How effective is the unsubscribe tool in Gmail vs. third party tools? A: Despite all the tools developed to fight the onslaught of marketing messages, it seems like a never-ending battle of the ...
Gmail is such an indispensable service for many people, that of all the apps a hacker could break into this is probably the one that would cause the most damage to a person's life. Just think about ...
By Brian X. Chen, The New York Times About two years ago, Google practically force-fed artificial intelligence to the masses when it began showing AI-generated responses to people’s questions at the ...
Gmail has quietly crossed a line that tech companies have been inching toward for years, turning the world’s most popular inbox into a live test bed for everyday artificial intelligence. Instead of a ...
Inbox fatigue is real. According to one analysis, the average person receives more than 120 emails a day, with some office-based staff receiving even more due to their work environment. From Substack ...
eSpeaks’ Corey Noles talks with Rob Israch, President of Tipalti, about what it means to lead with Global-First Finance and how companies can build scalable, compliant operations in an increasingly ...
Gmail users who get frustrated trying to find the “unsubscribe” link that’s often buried in small type at the bottom of promotional emails may instead start seeing it before they even open the message ...