Sorry, I get redirected to http://www.forbes.com/forbes/welcome/ every time. I guess I'll wait until some news regurgitator publishes a piece about the topic.
I tried Inbox for about month, but I ended up turning it off.
It was slower than the standard gmail interface, both on my computer and my phone. There was a noticeable lag when trying to open each email.
Additionally, on the Android app, they inexplicably removed the ability to swipe left/right in order to move from one email thread to the next. Instead, they implemented a vertical swipe which returns the user to the inbox. So the pattern for reading a series of emails is swipe-tap-swipe-tap-swipe-tap instead of a series of swipes. Additionally the swipe only triggers if I drag my thumb vertically over about 90% of my phone screen, which is very uncomfortable.
The article makes a very good point about the potential impacts of Google migrating users to inbox. I myself tried Inbox and didn't see the benefits. Will users get upset when their email client looks completely different? Will they actually stop using gmail? I predict google will get gun-shy and eventually abandon it.
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 27.4 ms ] threadIt will take you to http://www.forbes.com/sites/gordonkelly/2015/12/05/google-en...
It was slower than the standard gmail interface, both on my computer and my phone. There was a noticeable lag when trying to open each email.
Additionally, on the Android app, they inexplicably removed the ability to swipe left/right in order to move from one email thread to the next. Instead, they implemented a vertical swipe which returns the user to the inbox. So the pattern for reading a series of emails is swipe-tap-swipe-tap-swipe-tap instead of a series of swipes. Additionally the swipe only triggers if I drag my thumb vertically over about 90% of my phone screen, which is very uncomfortable.
Why mess with what works?