Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Hide Gmail's Links to Contacts and Tasks

Gmail tweaked the interface two weeks ago and many of the users complained about the links to the contacts manager and to the Google Tasks, which are now displayed at the top of the page, above the Compose button. If you rarely use the contact manager and you don't need a task management app inside Gmail, the two links can become annoying.

Google added a small button that lets you to collapse the group of links, but the setting wasn't preserved when you reloaded the page because of a bug. Now you can permanently hide the links to the "contacts" and "tasks".
http://felix-googleblog-archive.blogspot.comIf you ignore the blue bar at the top of the page and you don't click on the "Mail", you'll no longer see the two links. Gmail could add an option to move the horizontal navigation bar below the list of the labels, even as a Gmail Labs experimental feature. I partially solved this problem by enabling the "Quick Links" in Gmail Labs and adding links to the contact manager and to a mail view (is:unread).

http://felix-googleblog-archive.blogspot.comAnother option is to use this userscript that moves the links below the labels. The script should work in the Firefox (Greasemonkey is required), Chrome and Opera.

http://felix-googleblog-archive.blogspot.com
Apparently, Gmail's links bar is quite important and it's likely that Gmail will add links to the other services. A Google employee detailed its purpose:

"Gmail is home to a few different apps, including Mail, Contacts, and Tasks. The links on the left below the app navigation change depending which app you're using, while the app navigation links remains the consistent so that you can go between apps. If you're in the Contacts app, the big action button becomes the way to add a new contact. We use this button as the way to create things in other products like Google Docs and Google Calendar, too."

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