In the event that you've at any point messaged an Android telephone and needed an approach to send or ask for cash without moving to the Venmo, Square, or Google Wallet application, your petitions were replied. Discharged today through Play Store refreshes, Google will now enable you to effortlessly connect charging installments to Gmail messages.
In spite of the fact that this component has been accessible in the Gmail web application for a long time, this element is new to the Android application. What's more, not restricted to your contacts with Gmail addresses, and they needn't bother with the Google Wallet application. As Google clarifies, "The beneficiary can get or ask for cash ideal from the email itself - without installing another installment application. They can even orchestrate the cash they get to exchange specifically to their financial balance. In any case, it's free for both of you. "
To utilize the new component, tap the clipboard symbol as though you were joining a record and you would see two new alternatives: Send Money and Request Money. Tap on the thing you need and you can pick the sum, installment source, and note, at that point make a note of your message. At that point you can simply send your message obviously. Toward the finish of receipt, simply tap the Confirm Money connection and it will exchange cash specifically to your Google Wallet account. (In the event that you don't have a record, you have to experience the enrollment procedure.)
The element is at present being exchanged to an Android telephone however is constrained to the US form of the Gmail application. There are no words when it will come to iOS or universal clients. In the event that you have not gotten another rendition yet, you can test it by downloading the marked Google APKs from the APK Mirror.
You have cash! In spite of the fact that this isn't an issue that is asking for an answer, it's unquestionably an element that we'll be utilizing at the present time. Also, now we will have a simple method to bother every one of the companions that owe us cash.