 Hello everybody! In this video, I'll show you my top 10 list of new Gmail features. If you use Gmail for all your email connections, this video will certainly get you interested, because I'm going to tell you about the new opportunities brought by this email service. In fact, they have been added in late March this year, so let's find out about the new features we can enjoy now. The first thing I'd like to draw your attention to is Google Sidebar. The latest version of Gmail includes a side panel along the right side of the screen. It can host a number of third-party apps as well as classic Google features like Calendar, Google Keep, Tuts and others. To get more apps, click the Get Add-on button fashioned like a plus sign to open a pop-up panel. It will list the applications fully compatible and ready to use with a Gmail service. The main idea behind it is that users could do various tasks in a more organized way without interrupting their work to switch from the Gmail tab to another tab. Regardless of what you want to do, add an event to your calendar, a note for a specific contact or email client, or update your list of origin tasks, each of the functions you added to the side panel will always be visible. Another feature is the confidential mode for emails. It could be the most unexpected add-on to the variety of functions that Gmail already has. With this mode, you can enable specific security settings, set expiration date for accessing the letter, and even configure when it self-destructs before such days, with manual settings. When removed, the email will disappear without trace from the recipient's mailbox. The confidential mode is not limited to the self-destruct function for emails. The sender can add two-factor authentication so the recipient will have to enter a passcode received by SMS to their connected phone number or a confirmed email address. This mode also ensures that the recipient will not be able to forward, copy, print or download this email. However, it seems likely that the confidential mode cannot guarantee absolute email protection against screenshots, malware or virus attacks intending to copy the email contents and attached files. Anyway, this mode seems to be designed for sending sensitive business information. Enabling the passcode for two-factor authentication should be a very sound security setting if you are afraid the recipient's account may have been hacked or is just dangerous. It is quite easy to enable the confidential mode for an email. Open Gmail and click Compose in the upper left corner of the screen. In the New Message window that appears, type the text of your email and click on the bottom Turn Confidential Mode on or off, shown as a clock on a tiny lock. In the Confidential Mode window, select the settings you prefer and click Save. Another new feature is working with your emails offline. Now, you can search the inbox folder or type a new email even if there is no internet connection. Of course, the main actions related to sending or receiving new emails will be unavailable, but with the Gmail offline function in it, you will be able to do all other things without any limitations. So now, even if you don't have an internet connection at the moment, you can view the previously received emails, write a reply or compose a new email and send it. As soon as your computer establishes an internet connection, the email will be sent. By default, this function is disabled. To enable it, open Gmail, click on the gear saving button over the list of emails and select Settings from the menu that appears. Click on the tab offline and check the box next to Offline Email. And then finish it by pressing Save Changes. To disable this function, follow the same steps and uncheck the corresponding box. Another novelty is showing inline action buttons when you put the cursor over a specific email. In the old days, you had to open every email if you needed to remove it or archive it or do any other additional actions such as snoozing or marking it. But today, with a new functionality, just position the cursor over an email and the several inline action buttons will appear instantly in the subject line of this email. The clock-shaped button allows to postpone reading a specific email. Clicking it makes the email disappear from your inbox folder to reappear after sometime. Such invisibility period for an email can be later today, tomorrow, later this week, this weekend or next week. Just click on the clock button and then select the option from the list. If you want to select specific time for snoozing an email, click on Pick date and time and set all the details. Then finish it by clicking Save. One more new feature is Display Density. This function enables users to change the appearance of the inbox folder. There are three options – Default, Comfortable and Compact. With Comfortable, you will see less emails in one screen but with more empty space between the incoming messages. The Compact format lets you fit more emails into one screen, but this way they look sort of cramped and generally not too attractive. The third variant, Default, tries to strike a balance between the previous two. How could Gmail do without a dedicated feature to remind you about emails left without answer? It wouldn't be a Google product, then. Enabling this node suggests prioritizing certain emails and receiving system messages about specific emails to have a look at. The Gmail service will move important emails to the upper part of the screen. It will also inform you that one of the emails you sent has not been answered yet. So you will not forget about it and can take some follow-up action to make sure the recipient will respond to it. Alternatively, if there is any mail you received but haven't answered yet, it will ask you if you maybe want to send a reply. If applied properly, this feature, known as Nudge Mode, will only work when necessary to make sure that you don't lose track of really important emails among all this stuff in your inbox folder. If it distracts you too much? Well, the Nudge Mode can be disabled easily. In the Settings page, scroll down General tab until you find Nudges, and then uncheck the box next to Suggest emails to reply to and Suggest emails to follow up on. The next feature to impress you is clickable attachments within Gmail. Now, users can view and download email attachments right from the home screen of the email application. I mean Microsoft Word documents, PDF, or JPG files. Responding to necessary mail and its attachments will be shown under the subject line as clickable buttons. Here is one important thing to remember. The clickable buttons for attachments are not supported in comfortable or compact modes of display density and are only available in the default mode. Another useful feature is notifications for important emails only. With this new function, you will only see notifications about the most important emails or, to be exact, the ones that Google thinks are important. Well, after all, most of us will have to rely on Google's algorithms in deciding which email is important enough to deserve a notification. However, if you have a good list of trusted addresses, this function will help you greatly in filtering not-so-important emails. Easy Unsubscribe This function is meant for convenience rather than for security. The matter is that many websites send out newsletters, but unsubscribing them from them is something that most users have difficulty with. Usually, it means you need to visit a specific website and grope your way through its interface to find the magic button. The new email feature will help you unsubscribe from annoying newsletters you don't feel interested in. This way, you can unsubscribe from several newsletters coming from different websites and do it virtually in a few clicks. This one is really convenient, you know? To enable it, open an incoming email from a center you would like to unsubscribe from. Find the unsubscribe text link and click on it, then click Unsubscribe again. This is a small improvement, but with great potential for making your inbox cleaner and free from those nasty ads. Finally, the spam warning feature In the old versions of Gmail, warnings about potentially harmful emails were shown in the upper part of the screen. Now, such notifications have become bigger and contain more information. Gmail automatically sends suspicious emails to the spam folder, and the emails you have labeled manually as spam will also end up there. Above every email in this folder, you can see an explanation why it was classified as spam. The warnings are weighted by color in a way that's very easy to understand. If the notification is gray, this email is unlikely to be harmful. If Gmail believes it is dangerous, the notification becomes red. It means the sender may try to harm your device or steal your personal data. Summing up, using all these new features in Gmail will help you save your precious time, improve performance and protect your data from hostile actions. And that's all for today. I hope you find this video useful. Don't forget to hit the Like button and subscribe to our channel. Leave comments to ask questions and share your opinion about this topic. Thank you for watching and good luck.