This should help answer your query..

Gmail doesn't recognize dots as characters within usernames, you can add or
remove the dots from a Gmail address without changing the actual destination
address; they'll all go to your inbox, and only yours. In short:

[email protected] = [email protected]
[email protected] = [email protected]
[email protected] = [email protected]

http://mail.google.com/support/bin/answer.py?hl=en&ctx=mail&answer=10313


Regards,
R.Rajkumar

On Fri, Aug 6, 2010 at 8:41 AM, b4l4nc3r <[email protected]> wrote:

> Thanks so far. Could you or someone else perhaps answer my next
> relevant question?
>
> In that case, how are illegal characters (for app identifiers) in the
> e-mailbox's public identifiers (characters preceding the @) are
> handled when it's automatically used as an appengine app identifier?
> For example [email protected] for which the dot (.) is an illegal
> character for an App Identifier.
>
> On Aug 5, 7:37 pm, Barry Hunter <[email protected]> wrote:
> > All gmail addresses are reserved as app engine ids. Possbly someone
> > has it in gmail?
> >
> > Try emailing [email protected] and see if they want to let you use it?
> >
>
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