I miss Google Now so much as well.
Material UI is pretty good, nothing in GNow was reliant on the UI, they could have worked just as fine with Material UI.
It was genuinely useful (the update cards for appointments or travel were brilliant), didn’t get in the way and wasn’t infested with “news”. I say “news” when I mean rage/clickbait and adverts.
It was too effective at helping us use our phones less, which means fewer ads viewed. Some functionality such as the commute time cards came back, but it not nearly as effective fashion. And nothing has really replicated now on tap’s abilities.
The era of Google Now and Inbox was a golden era.
Going back to regular Gmail from Inbox was what finally broke my faith in Google and I was a proper fanboy too.
Not to be dramatic but same. For me it was Now, Inbox, then Play Music; the last being the final straw. The replacements for those services being notably worse showed they don’t give two shits about the end user experience. And don’t get me started on the messaging debacle.
Play Music was brilliant. Now we have that POS named YouTube Music that is impossible to manage your songs, because that turd mixes songs with regular YouTube videos and playlists that have nothing to do with music.
I have Tidal now, way better than anything else. Screw.you, Google.
Play Music pulled me away from my alternative sources of music. I used to keep a gigantic library of acquired music. I’m going back to old means now that YouTube music seems to be going down weird routes and adding functions that absolutely do not benefit me. Samples and comments? No thanks.
Only thing keeping me subscribed is YouTube premium. I watch a lot of YouTube content.
Now, Inbox, Reader and Play Music. Not that it was available in my country, but I think Google fibre was around the same time. I guess you could throw Google Chrome pulling internet standards forward rather than regressing them, into that box too.
Google was really on to a run of genuine winners at that point, weren’t they? It’s kinda a shame to see that all of the replacements really still are several steps behind what we had.
I know now that this trajectory almost seems inevitable for any big tech company now, but imagine where we would be now if Google had kept making genuinely good products and improvements.
I have a very similar story. I was the most Google centric person I know in 2014 and 2015. I grew disillusioned after they killed Inbox. I realized that tech doesn’t always get better with time. Sometimes the money motive leads to tech actively getting worse for users
It’s years later and they still haven’t incorporated inbox features into Gmail like they said they would and probably never will
There’s no money behind it, partially because there’s no real competition pushing them to provide a better experience. Plus, anything that saves time with email actually has a perverse financial disincentive. It means less time viewing the Promotions tab in Gmail. Inbox was the last gasp of innovation for its own sake at Google.
Same story here. I’ll never understand why they canned Inbox when it was clearly superior to vanilla Gmail.
Inbox was great, at least for my personal use. I’m not sure how much I would’ve liked at as a work email client, Gmail would probably have been better, but inbox seemed to ‘just work’ for my personal email needs. Felt so bad going back to Gmail. And Gmail still sucks just as bad several years later.
Yes. Shout it louder for those in the back!
Although Google’s invasive nature is now pretty well known, I really liked Google Now back when it was a thing. This had everyone sideloading google launcher APKs, then later on installing rootless pixel launcher on their phones and doing all kinds of jank to get it running.
Nothing comes close to the contextual cards, traffic alerts, next public transport times, day schedule, etc. If you needed some info, chances were it was a swipe away from your homescreen already waiting for you.
I’ve since moved on to Niagara launcher though.
Edit: add pre-pixel launcher
Yes. Shout it louder for those in the back!
But not too loud or the wrong Google Assistant will hear it and you’ll get an incoherent answer muttered from the other room about not being able to do that instead of being answered by the phone in your hand.
God that’s accurate. Or how telling your phone to launch Kodi on the CCwGTV, it showing you feedback that recognizes the name (eg “Launch Kodi on Main Google TV”, but still coming back with, “I can’t do that”
You’re just launching an Android app! Don’t give me that bullshit!
I’ve learned my lesson before. Google products don’t last, so I prefer to not get used to them at all. I’m only slightly confident in the search engine and the mail existing. Although not sure in what form.
With how Google marched backwards on cloud storage since the turn of the decade, GMail is getting even less promising. Once my wife and I finally move out of here, I’m going 100% self hosted, setting up my own email server, et al
@thanevim @dantheclamman @kubica Unfortunately, that’s not something you really wanna do. Depending on your domain, it might take years before your emails stop going to the spam box.
I work at a small company and one of my many hats is “the only IT guy”. I promise you, you don’t want to self host email. You will always be in spam filter hell and you’ll never really know if the email you sent actually made it to the destination until it’s too late.
Buy a domain, pay for an email provider, and hook them up. If you ever get upset with your email provider, find a new one and switch out the connections. That way, your email address never changes but where it’s stored can be.