Google's UK web mail users will now be able to have an @gmail.com email address rather than @googlemail.com, after the company settled a long-running trademark dispute with a British research firm. On ...
Under the shift, which Google said would eventually be rolled out to all users, old addresses would remain active. Messages ...
We knew it was coming, it was just a matter of when. Google has finally brought the Gmail name back to the UK. As regular Gmail users in Britain know, we’re saddled with the “Google Mail” name thanks ...
Four years ago, in October 2005, Google voluntarily renamed its Gmail service as ‘Google Mail’ in the UK. This was to avoid a trademark dispute with a British company called Independent International ...
Google is finally letting users change their Gmail address without losing data—but there are 3 strict rules you must follow.
Gmail will allow users to choose a new gmail username for the first time, judging by updated help documents in Asia.
"Trying to work things out has become distracting and annoying" Google has lost the right to the Gmail trademark in the UK. Starting today, the Gmail service will be known as Googlemail. While all ...
A Hindi version of Google's support page suggests that Google is testing a service to let users change their Gmail addresses ...
Google will finally allow you to change your @gmail address or create a new alias, according to a new support document.
Some Gmail account holders might soon be able to ditch their longstanding email addresses in a potential new update.
Since October 19, 2005, Gmail has been known as “Google Mail” in the UK. The means that everyone who signed up since that point was forced to use the cumbersome @googlemail.com address rather than a ...