Filed under: Business, Windows, Macintosh, Linux, E-mail, Office, Productivity, Web services, Google, Freeware, How-Tos
While we might have touched on it when we covered the release of the “new” version of Gmail, we thought you (like us) might have forgotten about this great tiny trick.
Gmail now treats every page like a web page. Okay, that might sound a bit too obvious, so we’ll explain. When you open a message, label, or do a search, each of the resulting pages you see will have a dedicated URL. This means that if you bookmark or copy and paste the URL, you can later return to exactly the same view.
Even more useful is the fact that the URL for a search works across different Gmail accounts. So if you have a friend or co-worker that you know has certain information in their email, but can’t seem to find it, you can do a search in your own Gmail account, then send your friend the URL for that search and they’ll have the exact same search criteria applied against their own account.
For example, if you want to search your Gmail account for “Download Squad”, try using the following URL:
https://mail.google.com/mail/#search/%22download+squad%22
Slick!
By the way, if you’re having trouble making this work, try accessing your account using the secure method. To do this, just ensure your Gmail URL begins with “https”. For some reason we can’t seem to make this trick work unless we’re using this method.











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