The step-by-step guide to using Google's best offerings, but spreading your online eggs into more than just one big basket out in Mountain View, California.READ»
Having everything on the web is handy, minus, of course, when it goes down, or you forget to sync something. Here are the best no-worry means of keeping your important documents accessible from any computer.READ»
The walking idea machine is hoping the citizens of the Internet will adopt his new 10 Commandments for solving this growing--and growing!--problem. Fast Company spoke with Anderson (not by email) to learn more.READ»
Is that little "neighborhood" group funded by the Koch brothers? With Inbox Influence you can see who gave what to whom in political contributions. READ»
What about Bob? He won't be forgotten or confused with others anymore, thanks to a new Gmail default mechanism emerging from Labs that suggests corrections for potential mistakes in your "to" box.READ»
Welcome to Fast Feed, the Fast Company reader's essential source for breaking news and innovation from around the web--bite-sized and updated all day.READ»
It's the 137th anniversary of Houdini's birth, and Google has a special Doodle for the event. But there's also plenty of early news for you to browse:READ»
In the world of email, a short list of companies dominate--Google, AOL, Yahoo, Microsoft--but there's a new player in the game that's ready to tear down their firewalls: Ronald Reagan.READ»
We are in the final stages of completely switching Foundry Group to Google Apps. This began as an experiment in August 2010 when I decided to Try Gmail for a Week and evolved into an actual plan after Gmail Won Me Over in September 2010.READ»
Google introduced its Priority Inbox system late 2010 to help users tackle the increasing burden of email influx. It's now just published research into how well PI works, and the results are impressive: 6% less time reading email, 13% less time reading crap.READ»
Want that limited-edition Chrome laptop but can't find it anywhere? We spoke with an insider at Google, who provided some details on the Cr-48 notebooks.READ»
One Inbox To Rule Them All: Gmail, Yahoo, and Microsoft can keep their @ extensions and domain names. Facebook just wants to swallow them up into a single destination. READ»