True" during WWDC, Apple launched the iOS 15 beta and announced iCloud Plus for paid iCloud subscribers. iCloud Plus brings several new features, including custom domains for iCloud Mail. Now, although it's still in beta, I'll show you how to set it up and use it right now. Thanks for watching Nine to Five Mac. Be sure to thumbs up, click the subscribe button, and enable notifications with the bell icon, so you won't miss any upcoming videos. Okay, so say you have a Gmail address. Here's a question: What happens if Gmail shuts down? Now, admittedly, that is highly unlikely, but if it happened, your email address would go along with it because your email address is a Gmail address. This doesn't just apply to Gmail; it applies to iCloud as well. If I had a jeff@icloud email address and iCloud shut down, yeah, I'd lose access to my email address. That's why I think it just makes more sense to own the domain for your email address. So instead of jeff@gmail.com, how about jeff@905mac.com or jeff@duckybenjamin.com? I don't know, but the point is, by owning the actual domain, your email address is portable. So if Gmail shuts down, I can move that email address over to iCloud, or if iCloud shuts down, I can move my email address over to Fastmail and still keep my custom jeff@duckybenjamin or jeff@905mac.com email address. But maybe I shouldn't say "shut down" because that's a little extreme. Maybe you just no longer agree with the practice of a certain business, and you want to take your email address elsewhere. Or maybe the quality of the service has degraded, and you want to move your email address to a better provider. Well, owning your own custom domain makes it possible to make that move. The reason...