Google's applications like Gmail, Camera, and Chrome are likely applications that came on your Android phone when you first purchased it. But unlike iOS where Apple has to ship an entire operating system update to update an application, Google's apps for Android can be updated right from Google Play. Google has been steadily updating their applications to take advantage of their new "Material Design" design principles that were shown off at Google I/O. With Android 5.0 Lollipop on the horizon, Google has to get the remaining applications up to date, and the latest application to recieve the new visual style is Gmail with its major update to version 5.0.

As you can see above, there's a lot of changes that come with the new Material Design interface. The most striking change is the the removal of the grey that was prevalent throughout the application. In the previous version, the color of an email preview changed to grey to indicate that the email had been read, while unread messages remained white. In the new design, the change between bolded or unbolded preview text indicates whether a message has been read. I personally find this to be much more aesthetically pleasing.

The header and status bar are now a nice moderately saturated red color that doesn't feel gaudy but brings more color into the interface. The circular button for composing a new email at the bottom also uses this red color. On the topic of circles, Google has begun to use circular contact photos throughout their applications, although in my case they just display the sender's first initial. If I had put in the effort to assign contact photos the new circles would display them where the squares previously did. 

Google has also redesigned the navigation drawer that houses your different inbox labels, and settings. The grey has been changed to white, and the top displays your cover photo from Google+ which seems to be a message from Google that you're supposed to change it from the default rainbow thing. 

The sliding drawer is a topic of debate right now because many applications implement it incorrectly, including many that are made by Google like the Hangouts application. Google's official guidelines state that the drawer is to slide in overtop of every other part of the interface except for the status bar. The new Gmail application implements this correctly, and I'm hopeful that every other Google application will be updated to adopt the proper design before Android Lollipop ships. It's very difficult to get developers to follow design guidelines when you don't set a good example with your own first party applications, and the navigation drawer in Hangouts has multiple issues with its design when compared to Google's guidelines. 

The last big change in the application is the support for adding email accounts from other providers like Yahoo, iCloud Mail, Outlook, etc. Any email account that supports IMAP/POP or Exchange can be added. This is a great feature as it eliminates the need to have to add every non-Google email account to the standard Email application which isn't given as much attention as Google's own Gmail app.

Source: Android Police

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  • phoenix_rizzen - Saturday, November 1, 2014 - link

    Can you set separate sync intervals for each account added to the new gmail? And can you set a different LED notification colour for each account?

    Those are the main reasons I like to keep work and home email accounts separated into different apps.
  • Brandon Chester - Saturday, November 1, 2014 - link

    You can change sync frequency, enable/disable notifications, and set a ringtone on a per-account basis. I don't see anything for notification LED settings.
  • phoenix_rizzen - Monday, November 3, 2014 - link

    Nice. I can probably live with the single colour for LED notification if I can continue with separate sync schedules and notification sounds.

    Will be nice to have the same set of gestures and features for both e-mail accounts.
  • Ortanon - Saturday, November 1, 2014 - link

    I bet there's still no goddamn Select All feature.
  • Morawka - Saturday, November 1, 2014 - link

    imagine how much damage you can do with it tho. Select all doesn't belong on mobile. Use your desktop/laptop for that.
  • Ortanon - Saturday, November 1, 2014 - link

    No one knows what you're talking about.
  • sabot00 - Saturday, November 1, 2014 - link

    You know you can just undo any damage right? Delete just sends the mail to the trash, and if delete can even be undone, so can any other action.

    You Luddite.
  • whiteiphoneproblems - Saturday, November 1, 2014 - link

    I see that when you have over 99 messages in a category, it now says "99+" rather than list the actual number...
  • av911 - Saturday, November 1, 2014 - link

    Agreed, one reason I'm still using Touchwiz. The biggest function from Samsung's email app is "select all emails for the one day". Tap on the checkbox and tap delete. How hard is it to implement? Who likes swiping to delete 20-30 emails?
  • Ortanon - Saturday, November 1, 2014 - link

    It truly does boggle the mind. And it's been so many years!

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