Grr, way to go, G-mail. “Let’s introduce a useless chat feature. Everyone loves useless features!” That’s fine, though. I can handle useless features, except…
“Alert the Internet!” goes the school division. “There’s chat on G-mail! Block it, block it! Don’t let them be productive by, oh, letting them e-mail themselves files!”
How frustrating. Now I can’t work on what I’d hoped to, because I can’t get into G-mail to get the document I need. To boot, I was hoping to reply to a professor’s e-mail, but… I can’t.
i wonder about schools that block those things…they say their internet (or their connection to it) is only for “educational pruposes”, yet they don’t enforce it until something really skeevy goes down.
shouldn’t they pick one way or another?
I’m confused, your use of professor implies that you are on the college level, but I can’t believe that a college would block any sites. Am I mistaken?
Ah, yes. The fact is that I’m a university student who works as a rental caretaker at a public school on weekends. I work about fifteen hours a weekend (five on Saturday, ten on Sunday), but most of my time is simply spent sitting around while the rental groups do whatever they came to do (play soccer and twirl batons, mostly). With all that free time, I tend to go to the library and do homework, but I was prevented from doing so yesterday by the silly blocking of G-mail.
Have you tried complaining and pointing out that chat is not Gmail’s main purpose and that people like you need to get to it? Also, you might want to complain to Gmail - that’s what I’m going to do. I hate the clutter it adds, too.