Google first unveiled Gmail to the public on April 1, 2004. Now, 22 years later, Google is finally letting some Gmail users change their account's username while retaining everything else in their ...
I've been there, you've been there, we've all been there. Most of us created our first Gmail account more than a decade ago, and since then, we've outgrown it. You walk up to a hotel desk, shop at a ...
Google has finally rolled out a feature that gives users the ability to easily change usernames. This feature initially became available to a subset of users last year, but it’s now available to most ...
Gmail has become one of the biggest email providers in the world, with Google proudly claiming that the service is used by more than three billion users. Despite all those users, though, the company ...
Gmail users in the United States can now change their email address without losing their data, Google announced this week. The update allows users to pick a new @gmail.com username while keeping their ...
Google is testing a new feature that will allow millions of Gmail users to change their @gmail.com address without losing their current one. While the update isn’t widely available yet and comes with ...
SAN FRANCISCO — Google announced Tuesday it is rolling out the ability for U.S. users to change their Gmail username for the first time in the platform's 22-year history, ending a frustrating ...
Google has officially announced that it is now rolling out the feature that will allow users to change their Gmail addresses after years of struggling with the same, embarrassing email username. The ...
Google Account users in the US can now finally change their Gmail username. The company says the old address will be saved as an alternate, where emails sent to your old address will still reach you.
As the most popular provider in the world, Google's Gmail is practically synonymous with personal email. But one issue has plagued Google users ever since Gmail first launched in 2004: Changing your ...
TL;DR: Google is fully rolling out the ability for people in the US to change their Google Account username, the first part of their Gmail address. It's easy to do this, and messages that arrive for ...