Please note that these Tips and articles may contain, specific features, issues, and opinions many have since been changed, updated, or corrected.
New in Labs: Extra emoticons
The following is is a posting from the Official Gmail News Blog:
Posted by Darren Lewis, Software Engineer
For a short period of time after launching emoticons for mail, we believed we had successfully captured the entirety of human expression in 19 faces (we’re still debating whether the robot face counts), important representatives of the animal kingdom such as
and
, emoticons for both love (
) and heartbreak (
), and, well, a pile of
.
But soon a growing feeling of dread overcame the group . How could we have included a
but not a cat? What if I want wine rather than
?
And thus was born a new Labs feature: extra emoji, the colorfully animated brainchild of our team in Japan. Simply go to the Labs tab under Settings, enable “Extra Emoji,” and have that glass of you’ve been dreaming about. Ask your in-laws about the fluffiness factor of their pet
. Become a meteorologist and start predicting
. Dance like you mean it
. Then let us know what you think.
(If you’re wondering how we had time to create another couple hundred emoticons when we’re busy doing important stuff like rewriting Gmail for mobile and making Gmail work offline, the answer is: we didn’t. All of these extra emoticons are straight from the secret underground labs of some of the top Japanese mobile carriers, used with permission. Thanks guys!)
Read the rest here:
New in Labs: Extra emoticons
PowerPoint and TIFF file viewing
The following is is a posting from the Official Gmail News Blog:
Posted by Marc Miller, Software Engineer
A few months ago, we added fast online viewing of PDFs in your browser. As of today, that same viewer now supports TIFF and Microsoft PowerPoint document formats too: you can now view TIFF and PPT files online, directly in your browser, without having to save the files to your computer and without needing to buy, install, or wait for any special software to start up.
We’ve had a “View as slideshow” option for PowerPoint files for a while; now we’ve integrated this conversion technology into the same viewer that we use for PDFs and TIFFs.

This viewer provides a richer set of features than the old “View as slideshow” version: you can zoom in and out, select text to copy and paste, and “print” the presentation to a PDF document. And, unlike the old version, we no longer require you to have a Flash plugin installed on your browser.

I don’t know about you, but the TIFF files I receive are almost always multiple-page faxes — and the default TIFF viewer on my computer only shows me the first page. It’s quite frustrating. On the other hand, our online viewer, powered by Google Docs, will show you every page and give you the option to “print” the TIFF by opening it as a ready-to-print PDF.
Read the rest here:
PowerPoint and TIFF file viewing
New in Labs: Suggest more recipients
The following is is a posting from the Official Gmail News Blog:
Posted by Ari Leichtberg, Software Engineer
Have you ever realized you mistakenly left someone important out of an email, or just spent too much time trying to decide who from your long list of contacts to include? Well, some of us on the Gmail team feel your pain, so we wrote a new Gmail Labs feature called “Suggest more recipients.”
Once you’ve enabled it from the Labs tab under Settings, you’ll see suggested recipients while composing messages. Gmail will suggest people you might want to include based on the groups of people you email most often. So if you always email your mom, dad, and sister together, and you start composing a message to your mom and dad, Gmail will suggest adding your sister. Enter at least two recipients and any suggestions will show up like this:

Click on a suggested name, and they’ll get added to your email.
Hopefully having lots of friends and co-workers just got a bit less onerous for you. (Oh, the burden of popularity!) Enjoy, and as usual, please let us know what you think.
See the original post here:
New in Labs: Suggest more recipients
New in Labs: Inserting images
The following is is a posting from the Official Gmail News Blog:
Posted by Kent Tamura, Software Engineer
Well, it’s about time. You no longer have to use workarounds to put images into your messages or attach images when you really want to inline them. Just turn on “Inserting images” from the Labs tab under Settings, and you’ll see a new toolbar icon like this:
Make sure you’re in rich formatting mode, or it won’t show up. Click the little image icon, and you can insert images in two ways: by uploading image files from your computer or providing image URLs.
Keep in mind that Gmail doesn’t show URL-based images in messages by default to protect you from spammers, so if you’re sending mail to other Gmail users, they’ll still have to click “Display images below” or “Always display images from …” to see images you embed.
Got feedback on inserting images? Send it our way.
Excerpt from:
New in Labs: Inserting images


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