Thursday, November 02, 2006

Mobile E-mail from Google - Again!

For those of you that do not already use your device for mobile email ... this new version of Google's email client is supposedly a lot easier to use. 

Google announced the release of an innovative new mobile client, Gmail for mobile devices. This freely downloadable Java application delivers Gmail users the look and feel of Gmail through a fast, feature-rich interface that's optimized for handheld devices. With the release of this client, Google is taking one more step toward its goal of providing users with quick and easy access to the information they need, when they need it.

Gmail users can already access their accounts through the browser on their mobile devices, but this application brings users the same great Gmail experience -- complete with search, conversation view, and automatic synchronization with the desktop version -- with the following new benefits:

  • Up to five times faster access and use, thanks to automatic pre-fetching of messages
  • Drastically reduced clicks and scrolling to access email
  • Fewer keystrokes for reading, composing, or searching mail
  • Attachments, including files and photos, viewable and automatically resized to fit the user's phone

"Google's mobile products are designed to enable people to quickly and easily get the information they want on the go," said Deep Nishar, director of product management at Google. "We realize the role mobile phones play as a key driver for balancing online and offline worlds, and we're committed to developing products that help people stay connected when they're away from their computers. Gmail for mobile devices delivers on that commitment."

Getting started is easy: users can go to gmail.com/app from their mobile browser to download the app. If users don't already have a Gmail account, they can sign up for an account via SMS by going to gmail.google.com and clicking on “sign up for Gmail.”

The application is available completely free of charge from Google (carrier mobile data charges may still apply). It is currently compatible with all J2ME-enabled phones in the U.S. and works with a variety of carrier service plans.

In a separate release today, Google and Sprint (NYSE:S) announced that Gmail for mobile devices can also be easily downloaded directly from the Sprint PCS VisionSM or Sprint Power VisionSM home page. Google and Sprint worked closely to ensure that Gmail is only a few clicks away for Sprint customers.

To learn more about Google's mobile offerings, check out mobile.google.com.

Click read more below to see the full news item

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

hi jack... enjoy your post... i just tried gmail on my Blackberry PEARL 8100, not very impressed, very clunky and slow, not as advertised, perhaps it is not yet optimised for PEARL. Anyhow, i'll post my video screenshots of gmail on PEARL on my blog.

By chance, have you come across another mobile mail client Tricast Mail?

I had tried their latest version and posted my short review on my blog... have a look.
http://mobiko.blogs.com/mutant/2006/11/tricast_mail_v1.html#comments

Anonymous said...

Hello, Greetings from me to.
At first I was trilled to install the app and it all went great, until I got an error saying: "certificate not valid". I am using SonyEricsson V800 for a wile with a small program Movamail http://movamail.com Personally I am satisfied with it because it supports POP, IMAP and Webmail (Gmail, Hotmail, Yahoo mail, AOL…) and it’s fast.
If someone finds better let me know !

Jack said...

it be a "work in progress" until they get it working smoothly on all devices.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for the tip on Movamail. Fast and easy. And they seem to work with most all java enabled phones. I do like Gmail Mobile, but also want to support all three of my main email accounts. I doubt Gmail will be supporting anything but Gmail. I also did some research and found this CNN article http://money.cnn.com/2006/02/06/technology/b2_thirdscreen0206/index.htm
I think this relates to 1.0, and not the recent 2.0 release.