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If you're having Gmail or other Google-related issues

Basil

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My Gmail stopped connecting a while ago and this is what they say in the Gmail - Service Details area of my account:

Our team is continuing to investigate this issue. We will provide an update by 6/2/19, 5:00 PM with more information about this problem. Thank you for your patience.

We continue to experience high levels of network congestion in the eastern USA, affecting multiple services in Google Cloud, G Suite and YouTube. Users may see slow performance or intermittent errors. Our engineering teams have completed the first phase of their mitigation work and are currently implementing the second phase, after which we expect to return to normal service.

Of course it could be anything, but if I were a betting man, I'd bet they were under a Ddos attack.
 
or their latest update was written by moonlighting Microsoft folks.
 
I think I've only used my G-mail a dozen times since 2011.
 
Office 365 was affected by some sort of problem about the same time. No email available for over 48 hours at Mits' workplace.
 
I've used Mozilla Thunderbird for a long time now and never had any issues with it. Can be easily customized for multiple accounts or to ones preferences. :encouragement:
 
These problems are with the provider of SaaS, 'cloud based' email clients. Thunderbird and Outlook run resident. Gmail, Office 365, Yahoo et al are web based, not resident.
 
Just to expend on that a bit - There is a difference between an email "service" and and email "client." All email services are cloud-based in the sense that the email resides on a server somewhere and can be accessed either via web-based client (web site) or a local (resident) mail client. Gmail, Office 365, Yahoo, Apple, even my mail on :atBritishcarforum are mail services where mail resides on a mail server somewhere. Thunderbird, Outlook, Apple's Mail App, are mail clients resident on your local computer whose purpose it to connect to a mail service (gmail, yahoo, whatever) and "download" the mail to your local computer.

The distinction is in what kind of protocol is used to access the mail server. There are two common options: POP (Post Office Protocol) or IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol). If an Email account is set up as POP, then, when the mail client connects to the server, the mail is downloaded completely (full content of all emails) to the local computer and then deleted from the server (default behavior). So if you were to check mail on a POP account on Computer #1, then later check the same account on computer #2 (assuming no new mail has been received), there wouldn't be any mail because it was all downloaded onto computer #1 already.

The other common protocol is IMAP, which works a little differently. With an IMAP account, when you connect to the mail server (say Gmail), what is downloaded is a list of the emails on the server, with minimal info (subject:, to:, from:, and maybe a small summary). The entire email is not downloaded unless and until you specifically select an email to read. Either way, the email is not deleted from the server like it is with POP. Instead, all the emails remain on the server until you direct the email to be deleted by deleting it from your client. This protocol allows all your computers used to access the mail account to be in sync WRT what emails are seen in the mail clients. Most email accounts can be accessed either by a local mail client (Outlook, Thunderbird, etc) or by visiting a web-based mail page (mail.google or yahoo.com).
 
Mine is setup as IMAP. I just deleted over 600 saved mails from one account! Amazing how they pile up. :sleeping:
 
I like their answer, Eastern US. Doesn't help with New Mexico! :encouragement:
 
Mine is setup as IMAP.

IMAP is far and away the most common set up these days. I have several different accounts with different services (to include gmail and yahoo) and all are set up as IMAP.
 
I know that, but you would think they would admit to a bigger problem, not just narrow it down. Like my cable company, we know the problem exists and we are working it. And the man is on the pole on Main St. In a drenching rainstorm, by himself.
 
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