Google's Gmail has graduated an unsend email option that had existed in the "Labs" section of the settings for years:
With the option, Gmailers get the chance to click an "undo send" link at the top of the screen after clicking "send" on any e-mail message. As with the original Labs version, the option, which now lives in the service's "general" settings tab, lets users pick a safety timespan between 5-30 seconds. Messages won't actually send until that time runs out, unless a user clicks the "view message" tab next to "undo," at which point a message will immediately whisk through the Internet's many tubes and reach its recipient.
The six-year-old option, which won't be turned on for the general public by default, had previously lived in Gmail's Labs tab, so if users wanted to enable it, they had to bypass a stark warning about "experimental" features that could "change, break, or disappear at any time." Major competitors like Hotmail and Yahoo Mail have yet to offer a similar option.
(Score: 2) by Freeman on Wednesday June 24 2015, @08:41PM
Sounds like a feature for the Rage Quit Generation.
Joshua 1:9 "Be strong and of a good courage; be not afraid, neither be thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee"
(Score: 3, Funny) by meisterister on Thursday June 25 2015, @07:34PM
WHAT DO YOU MEAN, RAGE QUIT GENER---
f*ck this, I'm done.
(May or may not have been) Posted from my K6-2, Athlon XP, or Pentium I/II/III.