netmouse: (Default)
netmouse ([personal profile] netmouse) wrote2005-12-01 07:24 am

Is it just me, or is gmail getting more conservative about account storage space?

When I first signed up for a Gmail account, they were all on the theme of "Why delete messages when you can archive instead?" The interface still makes it much more work to trash messages than to archive them (you have to select an option from a pull-down menu as opposed to just clicking a button).

But I could swear that when I got my account, at the bottom of my email listing, it proudly told me how much of my some-huge-number-of MB space I was using. And I was at 1% because the total was huge... Now, it says,

You are currently using 206 MB (8%) of your 2669 MB.


8%. In less than a year. Now, granted, I do a lot of publications editing, so people send me a lot of files, but this is not a good trend for a service that originally claimed it wanted us to "Save everything!" And I could swear that 2669 MB used to be something round, like 10,000 MB. Or 100,000? Am I making that up?

The Gmail servers also now occassionally report they are unable to complete an action (logging in, sending an email, or whatever) and request that I try again in a few seconds or a few minutes, and Bill recently reported that gmail refused to email a file because it was too large.

Does anyone know what's going on with them? Just failing to ramp up to more users? Or something else?

[identity profile] stardustgirl.livejournal.com 2005-12-01 09:17 pm (UTC)(link)
When I signed on they offered 1GB. I still regularly trash things just because it's easier to read through fewer things, and many things I receive are time-sensitive. The April plant sale specials are fairly worthless once April passes :-)

I also use it to store files offsite, but nothing secure.

Has anyone else noticed a huge increase in the amount of spam landing in your gmail box? I swear I've been deluged with more RAZR and ringtone offers in this past week than in my entire life. :P
ext_13495: (Default)

[identity profile] netmouse.livejournal.com 2005-12-01 10:25 pm (UTC)(link)
I trash things all the time. I'm on too many lists, really. But I do go to some effort to process my mail. Still, my inbox has 158 unread messages. There are 1162 messages in my inbox, total, and 1953 in my whole archive. The spam folder has 1210 messages, which I assume impact my disc usage. Note that's just spam that's less than 30 days old. Trash is also kept around for 30 days, so let's see... there are 2389 messages/lines in my trash folder. So that's how many I've trashed (manually or with filters) in the last 30 days. And actually I *think* that's technically how many conversations I've trashed, not how many individual messages.

hmm... looking at it, it looks like recently about half of my trashed messages are Bounce messages that are notifications of spam being sent to sfoha-talk. I have those on a filter. I should see if I can just get that notification shut off. I should also probably obfuscate that address on the sfoha web site.


Yes, I've been seeing a lot more spam make it to my inbox lately. And I'm almost surprised the gmail hasn't devised language filters by now. maybe I'll give them the suggestion. Because I'd like to say "I don't read russian. Anyone who has a reason to write to me will write to me in english. Or, on a long shot, spanish or french or German or hungarian. All Russian (or chinese, etc) is spam."

ext_13495: (nique)

But wait..

[identity profile] netmouse.livejournal.com 2005-12-01 10:31 pm (UTC)(link)
When I look at the oldest messages in my trash, they're from February. so it is *not* permanently deleting messages in trash that are more than 30 days old. And there is no command for "empty trash" in gmail.

Re: But wait..

[identity profile] minnehaha.livejournal.com 2005-12-02 02:25 am (UTC)(link)
Aren't you in any way concerned about the privacy implications of using this service?

K.

Re: But wait..

(Anonymous) 2005-12-03 07:42 am (UTC)(link)
yeah, that's actually part of why I'm concerned that trash isn't going away. I mean, not too concerned, because they make backups, so I expect nearly everything to live on in perpetuity anyway. I wouldn't use the service if I didn't think google will at least keep my email content in-house. I mean, most any email service *could* keep all your email, and probably does keep a lot of it in server backups; google is just up front about it. I'm not worried about the "using the content of my mail to point advertising at me" part.

But the fact that the trash isn't going away means that if there are any messages I really want deleted I need to delete them myself, not just put them in the trash. I guess that was always true.