Gmail has some new tricks for managing subscriptions. If your inbox is constantly slammed with subscription emails, you’re not alone. Gmail now includes a helpful tool to make managing those ...
Google has started rolling out a new Gmail feature that could help millions finally get a handle on inbox overload. The tool, called Manage Subscriptions, lets users view, sort, and quickly ...
Google has started rolling out a new feature to Gmail on Android that helps users easily manage email subscriptions. It adds a new Manage subscriptions page to the app that lists all active email ...
Inbox fatigue is real. According to one analysis, the average person receives more than 120 emails a day, with some office-based staff receiving even more due to their work environment. From Substack ...
Google has added a new feature to Gmail called the Manage Subscriptions list which brings a way to declutter an inbox as well as remove unwanted items. It has always been an issue where email ...
Judy is a reporter at XDA with years of experience writing about computing. She always has an Windows computer handy and is always looking into upgrading. When she's not writing about tech, she's ...
Subscriptions — can’t live with them, can’t live without them. But when your monthly (or yearly) subscriptions are becoming more of a financial burden than a useful perk, canceling the ones you barely ...
It can be really easy to put different email subscriptions in the back of your mind and let the emails just pile up in your inbox. This is an issue that we all have, but it looks like Google’s aiming ...
Take a close look at your credit card bill and maybe you’ll find a few surprises in the form of forgotten monthly subscriptions. If you’re tired of paying for those you no longer use but can’t quite ...
If you’d ask me to find an apt analogy for my Gmail accounts, I’d equate them with junkyards — heaps of trash that no one wants to touch or sort. And those heaps are only spreading wider and growing ...
SAN JOSE, Calif., Nov. 17, 2022 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Nearly three quarters of American subscription users (72%) say there are “too many” subscription services available today. To address the issue, 78% ...