HOW TO CREATE A GMAIL ACCOUNT IN LESS THAN 60 MINUTES

how do i you create a Gmail account? hope its the question you are asking yourself now? ok if yes worry no more because after reading this post you will learn how to setup a standard gmail account in minutes 1. Go to http://www.gmail.com 2. Click the button that says “Create an account” on the bottom right box 3. Carefully fill out all the fields on the form 4. Click “I accept. Create my account” You will be taken to an introduction page. Click “Show me my account”. You will be taken to your new email account and there will be some emails from the Gmail Teamwelcoming you, introducing you to some of the features and helping you import your contacts and old mail. Gmail as a Google Account So now that you have created a Gmail account, can you use it for anything, be email? The answer is yes. As explained above, Gmail accounts are also Google accounts, and though I were explained all services associated with them, you should know that you can use your Gmail id and password on many Google services, such as: Google Analytics - To track visitors to your website Blogger - Blogging site Google Calendar - A calendar directly integrated with Gmail Google Docs - An online document editor directly integrated with Gmail Microsoft Office online substitute. YouTube - Online video streaming Google Sites - To create websites and wikis Google Dashboard - Your portal to all of the Google services that can be accessed with your Gmail or Google account, from one interface. And many, many more services and sites. Gmail’s Interface Though most of Gmail’s email functions are similar to the ones you might have used in other email services, it’s common to have to take a little time to acquaint yourself to a different interface. Below is a simple guide to using Gmail’s web interface: 1 - Inbox It is where you will find the email you have received and also where you will find replies you have written to those emails. Gmail stacks the messages sent back and forth between 2 or more people so that you can view them all as a single strand, and easily follow conversations up as shown on the example below. 2 - Compose Mail It is what you would click to start writing an email. You can either type the full email address or start typing the first few letters and Gmail will search through your contact list and give you email address options to choose from. You can also click on the “To” button to be taken to your contact list where you can choose the email you want to use. When writing your email, by putting your mouse over the buttons on the compose panel, you can tell what each button does, be it change colour, font, insert image or link. 3 - Drafts Gmail will save a copy of the email you are writing as you write it as a “draft”. It will do so on small time intervals, but if you decide to save it yourself, you can always just click on the button that says “Save Now” on the bottom of the compose window. When you do that, a copy gets saved on the Draft folder, so you can continue to write it later if you prefer. Once you send the message, they automatically disappear from the Drafts folder. 4 - Sent Mail All the email you have ever sent someone can be found by clicking the “Sent Mail” button. It will separate the emails you have sent from the ones sent to you so you can clearly see only the ones you sent yourself. 5- More The “More” button opens a series of options such as your “Spam” and “Trash”. You can drag those labels in and out of the more buttons to customise how you want to view the main buttons on your email, so if you decide you want to have your “Trash” button readily available under the inbox, just drag it there, and if you decide you want your “Drafts” under the “More” button, just drag it there. 6 - Report Spam Gmail tends to do a great job keeping spam out of your inbox, but if you do receive some, or there is some insistent company that keeps emailing you even though you asked to be removed from their mailing list, simply select that email and click on “Report Spam”. It will make any emails from that address go straight to spam, and it will help Gmail recognise it in the future. 7 - Delete Because your storage space with Gmail is constantly growing, it is unnecessary, for most people, to ever need to delete emails. If you just don’t want to see a certain email on your inbox anymore, check the box next to that email and click the delete button. It will be moved to your trash folder. If you permanently want to remove your email, delete it out of your trash folder as well. Organising your Gmail Over time, you may receive thousands of emails, and trying to find a certain email can become a difficult task. That is why it is important to organise your emails so you can easily find important ones in the future. Below are some useful features to help organise all your emails and contacts. Contacts There are several ways to add and organise your contacts. Click on the “Contacts” button on the left hand corner bar and you will be taken to a new page. One very useful thing about Gmail is that you don’t really have to add your contacts by hand in the long run. Gmail will automatically add the emails of everyone you replied to or have written to Gmail will, by default, show you initially the most used contacts you have. To view contacts that don’t appear on that list, either use the search feature or click on the button that says “All”. By clicking on the single little person with a + sign on the upper left hand side, you can add individual contacts. By clicking on the multiple little people with a plus sign, also on the upper left hand side, you can create a group. You can move several people to each group, so when you need to email them you don’t need to select them one by one. For example, when I am working on a project with a certain number of people, I create a group called “Project Whatever Name” and add to it all the people who are part of that project. That way, when I need to send them all a common email, all I need to do is select that group on the email address field and they will all receive the email. You will notice that Gmail has already created a few groups for you if you decide to use them. They are the “Friends,” “Family” and “Coworkers” groups you see to your left of the screen. On the upper right hand corner you will notice the import and export buttons. You can import your contacts formatted as CSV files from Outlook, Outlook Express, Yahoo! Mail, Hotmail, Eudora and some other apps. Gmail also supports importing vCard from apps like Apple Address Book. The Export button is used if you want to do the opposite, export all of your contacts to use in another program or as a back up. You can also print contact information if you prefer hard copy. Gmail will also help you manage your duplicate contacts by merging them or removing old contacts. You can also click on someone’s name and view all your recent conversations you have had, which means, you can see all the emails you exchanged recently. You can also do that simply by searching for the email address or the name of a contact on the search bar on the main screen. Stars Stars function in Gmail as a way of marking emails that you would like to pay attention to. You can star an email simply by clicking on the little star icon on the left hand side of any email when on inbox preview. When you decide to look for them again, you can simply click on the ‘Starred’ button and it will retrieve all the emails you have chosen to mark with a star. Labels Labels are a much more elaborate way of organising your emails. They work in a very similar manner to folders in other email clients. You can create labels by clicking on the button on top of the messages that says “Labels” and selecting “Manage Labels”. You will then be taken to a page that lets you manage all of your labels, whether you want to show them or hide them from the left side menu, and the option to delete them or create new ones. When you decide to add an email to a particular label, simply check the box next to that email, go to the label pull down and check the label you want to be assigned to that email. Much like the stars, or folders, if at point you want to view only emails that have that label, click on the name of the label on the left hand side menu and all the emails you have attached that label to will appear. You can also “mute” an email. Let’s say you signed up for a mailing list, you want to receive, so they are not spam, but they send emails so frequently that you don’t want to see it popping up all the time. Well, you can go to “more actions” and select “Mute” or simply type the letter “m” when reading one of the emails, and from then on, all emails coming from that group will bypass the inbox and go directly to archive, where you can find them when you do want to read the message. Advanced Settings There are many settings to choose from with Gmail. Some control basic features, some add features to the emails, some determine how you reply, who you receive emails from, and how you use your Gmail services. Below is a brief guideline for some of those settings. You can Access them by clicking on the “Settings” button on the upper left hand corner of your Gmail window. General Settings There are many things you can determine from the general settings. A few examples are: 1. Maximum Page size: It determines how many emails you see at a time (the default is 50). Just remember, making that number very large can make your page load slower. 2. My Pictures: It allows you to upload a picture which will be seen by your friends when they chat with you, move their mouse over your name on the chat bar, on Buzz, or throughout your Gmail pages. It’s a great way to personalise Gmail. There is also a setting to determine whether you get to see the picturesyour friends uploaded. 3. Signature: You can write something inside the box that would appear on the bottom of every email you write. Some people use that to add their contact information without having to type it every time. Others use it to add something fun, like a quote or a saying they like. 4. Vacation Responder: Let’s you add a message that will automatically be sent to anyone who emails you during a certain period of time. That way if some business email comes in, you can add the auto responder to reply with an alternate contact while you are away and a message saying when you are coming back. It is also useful for friends who might not realise you are away and who will be wondering why you aren’t replying to their emails. Accounts and Import It is under these settings that Gmail has options to help you import your email and contacts from other email accounts. Simply click the button that says import mail and contacts and follow the prompts. It will ask for your email and password and email will attempt to import all of the information. In certain cases, such as when you are trying to import emails from your personal website, you might have to add information, such as pop server. You can also use Gmail as a substitute to use your own URL email, such as yourname@yourwebsite.com, without people realising you are doing it. That’s where the “Send mail as” can be handy. The easiest way to make use of this is to set whatever your other email is to forward to your Gmail account. From that point, click on the “Send mail another address” button. Enter your name and the other email address and click next step. Gmail will send that email a confirmation number that you have to type in that box to prove that you are the person receiving that email. One you have added that number, you can select to either make that email your default responder, or it will be one of the emails on a pull down you can select to respond as. You can also have Google host the email for your domain, by using Google Apps, that way you would use your own domain address but within the Gmail interface. To sign up to Google Apps, visit http:// www.google.com/a Check mail using Pop3 allows you to import emails from different accounts, so you can read them and reply to them via Gmail. Gmail allows you to do that to as many as 5 email addresses. The difference between that and the forwarding option is that this allows you to get those emails on Gmail while still receiving them on your original email address. Filters The Filter setting allows you to manage spam and choose how to handle certain messages. Click on “Create new filter” and you can decide to “filter” a certain email address, subject and even specific words. You can then decide how you want that filter to be applied. The options include: Skip the Inbox (Archive it) Mark as read Star it Apply the label Forward it to Delete it Never send it to Spam Forwarding and Pop/IMAP What happens if you have a favourite email client, such as Outlook or Thunderbird, but you still want to use Gmail? You can control your options to either forward Gmail emails to another email address, or to set it up to work with other email clients so you can download your email to view on your computer or as a way of archiving the email in a physical location as opposed to on the Google cloud. Offline Another great feature is the ability to have access to your Gmail even when you are not online. So let’s say you are on a plane with no web access, but it is also the perfect opportunity to catch up with all of those emails you haven’t had a chance to reply to. If you enable Gmail offline, it will download the email to your computer, so that you can reply to and read your email, or catch up on adding contacts and when you go back online, those messages will be sent and Gmail will catch up to everything you did while offline. You can even add attachments that will be sent when you are back online. It even has a “flaky connection mode” which helps Gmail adjust to the internet connection you have if it is unreliable and download the messages to your computer as the connection comes and goes. That way, you don’t have to worry that you will lose the emails you have typed if you suddenly go offline. Gmail will catch itself up to the changes you made offline when the computer goes back online. To turn offline on, click on the “create a desktop shortcut” and Gmail will create an icon on your desktop to make it easier for you to access it while offline. It’s almost like having an email program installed on your computer but with the Gmail features and with the knowledge that if your computer breaks, you still have all of your emails and contacts safely stored with Google. The Fun Stuff Gmail is not just about work though. The folks at Google have added a few features to ensure we can also have some fun while emailing. To access any of the settings for the features below, click on “Settings” on the upper right hand corner of your email. Buzz Buzz is basically Gmail’s response to Facebook and Twitter. It is meant to work as a social network that you opt into if you want to use it. It is not active on your account by default. You can follow people on your email list and be followed, see their status updates and post pictures and video to share with each other. You can also use it to import your stuff from Twitter, Picasa, Flickr, and Google Reader. And share them with your friends and contacts. Buzz can be enabled and disabled by going to “Settings > Buzz”. You can choose to show it on Gmail, whether to make your Buzz contact lists public, or whether to enable or disable it completely. Chat The chat is a quick way to communicate with friends when emailing doesn’t seem to be the best way to do it and you only need some quick and instant back and forth. It can only be used between Gmail users and even then, only between those who have accepted and opted in to accept chats, but that is still a surprisingly large number of Gmail users. All you have to do to chat with someone is look for their name on the chat box on the left hand side of the screen. Check if they are online, which you can tell by looking for a small green dot next to their name. Double click on their name and a little chat window will appear. Start typing your message and click send (or enter). They will hear a little warning and a small window will appear that allows them to read your message and type back. In case they log off while you are typing, you will be told they are now offline and be given an option to send the chat as an email instead, which they will receive when they get back online. You can also sign into AIM by using the same interface and chat with your AIM friends as well. Web Clips When Gmail was just launched, there were certain concerns that Gmail would be mining information from the emails to post ads that were relevant to you. The truth is that there is an algorithm that determines what ads would be most relevant depending on key words from the emails, but no private information is ever sent to Google. Another way to control what you see on top of your inbox and related ads is by using “Web Clips,” which can be found under “Settings >Webclips”. It is basically a way to control what you want to see displayed above your inbox. You can choose among hundreds of feeds, custom content from major sites such as CNN, Forbes, YouTube, news and yes, even ads. And if you prefer, you can even disable them all together. Labs Labs adds a whole new dimension to your email experience, which makes you an active participant on the development of your email features. What Google has created with Labs, is a way of testing features they are considering implementing on their email, as well as trying some of the totally wacky, but sometimes surprisingly useful add-ons Google created for their email. Because many of those features are being tested, some of the features come and go, but they are certainly worth a try anyway. Themes Now, for some people, the Gmail look is dull and boring. Fear not… If the standard Gmail interface is too tame for you, Google has thought of people just like you and added “Themes” to Gmail. Basically it allows you to choose from several looks. Gmail Mobile There are many ways to integrate Gmail into your phone, be it an Android phone, another smartphone or a simple Java capable phone. You can download a simple bookmark to connect you to the mobile version of Gmail by going to http:// www.google.com.au/mobile/mail/. From that page you can even have Google send you the link to your phone via text message. Android and smartphones have a plethora of options to choose phone be it integrating the email with their phone, importing the email into the email program, or simply accessing it online. Gmail was built to be easily accessible by people on the move. From any phone, you can go to http://gmail.com to get the Gmail web app or access the mobile version of Gmail. Note: Congratulations! Now you are really a Gmail Expert! If you have practiced well, and can manage your Gmail Id you can now tighten your seat belt for next level, you still believe you need to learn more, go back and practice more and more… And I believe you will become ready for the next level. Tip: Make Gmail accounts for your family and manage them for a while.

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