Ticker

6/recent/ticker-posts

Gmail: You won't waste time reading long messages anymore, this new feature comes to the rescue on Android

Gmail: You won't waste time reading long messages anymore, this new feature comes to the rescue on Android

Google has announced a new feature for Gmail on Android that will save a lot of time for those who often receive long emails. Here's how.

Gmail: You won't waste time reading long messages anymore, this new feature comes to the rescue on Android

If you have an Android smartphone, there's a good chance you use Gmail as your primary email management app. It may even serve as your professional email.

If this is the case, you know how easy it is to spend a lot of time on it: group exchanges that don't necessarily concern you, useless replies like "Thank you" or "Noted," very long emails that you still have to read in full to be sure not to miss important information...

Google is not fooled. The Mountain View company is aware of these pitfalls and is looking for solutions to remedy them. For example, it announced the arrival of emoji reactions to emails in Gmail. No need to reply "Okay" to indicate that you have read a message, a simple thumbs up is enough. As for long emails, it is the Gemini artificial intelligence that will help you. After revealing that Gemini can summarize messages in Gmail, Google is going even further.

This new feature will save you time on Gmail, here's how

Until now, it's up to you to say whether you want an email summary by pressing the button asking the AI to generate it. In a blog post, Google explains that from now on, Gemini will automatically display important information from a message received in Gmail when necessary. Better yet: the summary will update itself by integrating any responses so you don't miss anything.

This won't prevent you from quickly scanning the entire text just in case, but if the system proves effective, it will save a lot of time on a daily basis. Along the same lines, Gemini will also summarize conversations in Google Chat, and even the content of documents shared in the messaging system. Practical.

Post a Comment

0 Comments