Until today, one of the biggest drawbacks of Gmail is that you could
not go through your emails when you were offline. Today, that changes.
Gmail is finally going offline. Google is rolling out a Google Gears
version of Gmail that will be available to users starting today in
Gmail Labs. (If you don’t see it, keep checking, the rollout to all
users should be complete by the end of the week).
After installing the Google Gears plug-in to
your browser, Gmail detects when you are offline. It caches your e-mail
so that you can read it, respond to it, search it, star it, or label
it. When you are connected to the Internet again, it sends all the
messages. You can even open attachments. This is exactly the way Gmail
already works on mobile phones such as the Android and those that support Gears. In fact, according to Gmail product manager Todd Jackson, who briefed me earlier today:
The underlying sync engine is exactly the same for Android and offline Gmail.
Some features, however, won’t work. Anything that requires an
Internet connection, such as spellcheck, won’t work offline. And while
you can open attachments, you won’t be able to add attachments at
launch (that feature will be added soon, however).
Google Gears is a key part of the company’s Web app strategy. An Gears version of Google Docs
was introduced in March, 2008. And an offline version of Google
Calendar will soon be offered to enterprise customers. Jackson explains:
Our long term vision is that the browser is the
ideal platform for deploying all types of applications. We think the
most powerful applications should run inside the browser. Historically
it has been constrained by the connection.