You can download it for Android or iOS or access it on desktop here. Inbox did that for me, and it may do the same for you.
So perhaps it’s time for you to leave that old user experience behind–and make your life a lot less stressful in the process.
In previous versions of Outlook, I could type a name into the contact search field in the upper left and open the desired contact with one click in the. When I am in Outlook, I want to see the information I have stored in Outlook, not LinkedIn or any other social networks. While these great features work elegantly and effectively on Inbox, they look just crammed in the new revamped Gmail interface. I hate the new contact cards and find their behaviour unpredictable. The company claims that it has revamped that interface to make it easier to use, yet I can only see clutter and such a density of interface elements that my left eye twitches every time I look at a screenshot. What Google has done with the new Gmail design is retrofit all of those Inbox features–along with, admittedly, some new ones like self-destructing emails and un-forwardable emails–into the Gmail interface. The new Gmail comes with a long list of great new features: The ability to snooze messages, perform quick actions on messages, easily preview attachments, automatically send smart replies, create new reminders and calendar events, or get nudges that remind you to follow up on what Google’s AI thinks may be important emails. I know these are great features because I’ve been using them through Google’s Inbox for years now, along with Google cards that automatically show you travel itineraries, car rentals, and other important events in a clear, impossible-to-miss way.