summarize everything in your email inbox with Claude, Gemini or ChatGPT

Let’s explain to you how to make summaries of the newsletters you have in your email punctually with artificial intelligence. So, if you see that they have been accumulating but you don’t have time to read them, you will be able to ask the AI ​​to summarize them all for you. If your email is Gmail you can resort to Gemini already Claudeand if you have an outlook email then you can do it with ChatGPT. These are the AIs that have connectors for each mail service. But we will also start by telling you how we recommend organizing the newsletters in the email so that it is easier for the AI ​​to find them. First, organize your newsletters Before you start, I recommend tag all newsletters with the label or category system that Gmail and Outlook have. This way, you will be able to later ask the AI ​​to search directly in these categories instead of having to analyze the entire content of your email. Therefore, take your time entering the newsletters and tagging them. At first you will have to label them all, but then, each email address will be linked to the labelmeaning that the next ones that arrive to you and are not new will already be well labeled. Now link AI to your email Claude has a connector system where you must add and activate Gmail. Gemini allows you to do the same with its Connected Appsand in ChatGPT you have a section Applications which allows you to connect Outlook. With this previous step, you will have to link your email account to the AI ​​so that it can access and read your emails. If you are most concerned about your privacy Maybe you should reconsider doing this, because in the end you are going to link your account to the AI, so it can read and process all your emails when you ask it, storing its content on your company’s servers. The emails will no longer be private, you will be sharing them. Now, ask the AI ​​for a summary And now it’s time to go to the AI ​​and write a message asking for the summary. This prompts It has to mention Gmail or Outlook depending on the AI ​​you use and the email you have linked, and if you have done what we have recommended you have to indicate the newsletter label and ask for a summary. Besides, you can specify the structure of the summary so that it is more to your liking. This is the prompt that I have used: I want you to enter my Gmail account, analyze all the emails in the “Newsletters” label, and give me a summary of their content. It has to be a schematic summary, with an H2 for each email telling me the title and sender, and then bullets where you explain the most interesting points of its content. With this, the AI ​​will start to see the emails within your account and will give you a summary as you have requested. Here, keep in mind that you can simply tell it to search for the newsletters without having tagged them, but then there is the possibility that it will not find them all or consider something as a newsletter that really is not. Each AI will give you the results in its own wayalthough maintaining the structure that you have requested if you have specified it. Thus, with the prompt that we have used you will have everything summarized in several points so that you can read it in just a few minutes. In Xataka Basics | Claude: 23 functions and some tricks to get the most out of this artificial intelligence

Google has decided to touch the heart of Gmail. Gemini aims to transform the inbox into something completely new

Email has been there for decades, functioning almost silently, as a basic piece of digital life that we rarely question. We use it for studies, work, registering for services, coordinating our personal life and resolving procedures that continue to pass, to a large extent, through the inbox. Precisely for this reason, the changes in this section are usually minimal and prudent. Gmail has been a good example of that stability for years. Now, Google has decided intervene in a more profound way and do so relying on artificial intelligence. From the Mountain View company, the argument is clear: the problem is no longer just receiving emails, but managing the volume and context that accumulate in the inbox. Gmail was born in 2004 in a very different scenario, and today it coexists with endless threads, cross conversations and an information load that never stops growing. In this framework, the company presents the so-called “Gemini era” as a logical step, a way to turn the inbox into something more than a chronological file and begin to treat it as an active system to understand, prioritize and act on information. Google links a good part of these changes to Gemini 3the model that claims to be behind the new capabilities. Search less, ask more. The traditional logic of email has always been the same: search, filter and read. AI Overviews breaks that sequence by introducing a layer of automatic synthesis. When a thread gets longer, Gmail can generate a summary with the important points, avoiding having to go through message by message. And when what is needed is specific information, the proposal is even more direct: ask the inbox. Gemini interprets the query, reviews the relevant emails and returns a summarized response. Google separates the scope of these features: automatic thread summaries gradually roll out to everyone, while the option to ask inbox questions with AI Overviews is tied to Google AI Pro and Ultra subscriptions. Write with help and understand what goes into each plan. Beyond reading email better, Google also wants to make writing it take less effort. Help me write is free and allows you to both polish existing messages and write them from scratch based on a brief indication. Added to that are the new Suggested Replies, which evolve the classic quick replies by taking into account the full context of the thread and the user’s own style. The most advanced layer, Proofread, adds grammar, tone, and style checking, but is reserved for those who subscribe to Google AI Pro and Ultra. According to Google, the rollout begins today in the United States and starts in English, with the promise of expanding languages ​​and regions in the coming months. The new inbox. AI Inbox is the most ambitious bet of this change. Gmail introduces an alternative view that transforms the inbox into a combination of task list and summary of active topics. Artificial intelligence promises to detect pending commitments, payments, appointments or responses and present them as suggested actions, while grouping long conversations together for easy catch-up. The idea is not to replace email, but to reinterpret it, making what is important emerge without the need to manually scroll through messages that, although relevant, are buried by the volume. At the moment, AI Inbox does not come as a function open to everyone. Google is testing it with “trusted testers” in the United States and only through the browser, with priority for personal Gmail accounts and not for Workspace accounts. Furthermore, the proposal still has visible shortcomings: there is no system to mark suggested actions as completed, which limits its usefulness as a task manager. Control in the hands of the user. New features powered by Gemini can be turned on or off, and the classic inbox is still available. However, that control is not completely granular: turning off AI also means you lose other smart features that many users already took for granted. Regarding privacy, Google states that it does not use Gmail emails to train its artificial intelligence models, a key guarantee so that this new layer does not generate distrust in such a sensitive space. This movement makes it clear that Google has decided not to stand still in a field that had been operating for years without profound changes. If this new way of understanding email proves to be useful on a daily basis, it is reasonable to think that other providers will end up following a similar path. In technological careers, not moving or reacting late usually has a cost. But email is also governed by a very different logic: if something works, touching it involves risks. Gmail now enters a real testing phase, where it will be necessary to see if this bet manages to simplify the experience or adds unnecessary complexity. Images | Google In Xataka | Alphabet has just overtaken Apple in the ranking of the most valuable companies in the world. The reason is in AI

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