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Gmail users get new summary cards to track purchases, events
Gmail users are getting an upgrade to their inboxes.
The email app’s summary cards have been redesigned to give users a snapshot of their purchases, including shopping receipts, travel confirmations, reservations and other information that used to be dispersed across apps and inboxes.
Summary cards are not new to Gmail, but they’ve been redesigned, and now have an inbox tab of their own, called “Happening soon,” according to Google.
If you buy tickets to a concert, the event’s summary card will have an action button that will allow you to add it directly to your calendar, or invite others to join the event, Google added.
The redesign also helps users set reminders to pay bills, and lets them know when they can expect a delivery, without having to dig deep into their inboxes and then follow a link.
The updated summary cards apply to four frequent types of emails, Google said. They include:
- Purchases: View order details and track package arrival dates.
- Events: See a summary of dinner reservation details or concert tickets, and add events to your calendar or invite friends to join you.
- Bills: View due dates for bills and set reminders to pay them.
- Travel: Manage reservations, check in for a flight and access travel details like a hotel’s check-out time all in one place.
The updated summary cards are now live. In the near future, Google will roll out the “Happening Soon” section at the top of inboxes where users can view updates without having to open emails.
Here’s what the new summary cards look like.
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Doctor admits to role in Matthew Perry’s death, pleads guilty to federal ketamine charge
A doctor criminally charged in connection with the death of Matthew Perry pleaded guilty Wednesday to a federal charge of conspiracy to distribute ketamine, which carries a maximum possible sentence of 10 years in prison.
Mark Chavez agreed to surrender his medical license after being charged in connection with the actor’s death in August, along with four other defendants including another doctor who federal prosecutors say conspired with him to deal an illegal, unethical and dangerous amount of ketamine to Perry in the last month of his life.
Chavez previously agreed to plead guilty. On Wednesday, he entered a guilty plea in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles.
The other people charged in Perry’s death include the L.A.-area physician accused of conspiring with Chavez, Salvador Plasencia, Jasveen Sangha — an alleged North Hollywood drug dealer who prosecutors have said is known as the “Ketamine Queen” — Perry’s former live-in assistant, Kenneth Iwamasa, and Erik Fleming, a Hawthorne man federal authorities have described as a street dealer who acted as a middleman.
In a plea agreement, Chavez admitted to taking ketamine and other prescription drugs from a ketamine infusion clinic in San Diego where he used to work. He also confessed to falsifying a prescription to provide Perry with the drug; using a patient’s name to have the prescription filled without that person’s consent or knowledge and making false statements to a wholesale ketamine distributer so he could supply more of it to Perry.
Nine days before Perry died, on Oct. 19, 2023, Chavez was interviewed by investigators with the Medical Board of California and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency, according to federal prosecutors. When he spoke with them, he concealed the fact that he had distributed ketamine to Plasencia who then allegedly provided the drug to Perry, prosecutors said.
The plea agreement states that Chavez is aware that the federal charge he is agreeing to plead guilty to, conspiracy to distribute ketamine, carries a maximum possible sentence of 10 years imprisonment, 3 years of supervised release and a fine of $500,000 — or twice the gross gain or gross loss due to offense depending on which is greater — as well as a mandatory assessment of $100.
On Aug. 30, Chavez appeared in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles but did not enter a plea at the time. He had previously agreed to plead guilty to his role in Perry’s death.
While he avoided questions from reporters as he entered the court in August, his attorney, Matthew Binninger, spoke outside the courthouse afterwards.
“He’s incredibly remorseful for what happened — not just because it happened to Matthew Perry but because it happened to a patient,” Binninger said. “He’s trying to do everything in his power to right the wrong that happened here.”
Just days before Chavez appeared in court, his physician’s license had been suspended and he was not permitted to practice, according to records from the Medical Board of California.
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How Vance, Walz struck a cordial tone and focused on policy
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The Electoral College – explained
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