If your Gmail handle still screams "middle school," Google is finally offering an exit ramp, the New York Times reports. More than 20 years after Gmail's launch, the company says users can now swap out their existing addresses without abandoning their inboxes, meaning no more starting from scratch just to ditch that cringey username. CEO Sundar Pichai framed it as a chance to "say goodbye" to those long-regretted handles, which once felt harmless when email was mostly for messages—not the key to streaming accounts, bills, cloud photos, and more.
The shift, quietly tested earlier this year, addresses long-standing complaints from people whose usernames no longer match their names, jobs, or lives. (Pichai used "v0t3f0rp3dr02004@gmail.com" and "mrbrightside416@gmail.com" as examples of usernames that might now make one wince.) But not everyone's racing to rebrand: some users told the Times their oddball addresses feel like part of their identity or a nostalgic record of earlier eras online. But, as Engadget reports, those old addresses won't entirely go away; they'll remain as alternate addresses, meaning people can still reach you by sending email there. For those who do want a cleanup, there's one catch: Google will only let you pick a new Gmail address once per year. Ready to go for it? Mashable has instructions.