Java on the cell phone part II: 3 Email applications

June 22nd, 2006

With the risc of repeating myself, I will try to deepen the post from yesterday concerning the possibilities for upgrading cell phone with Java applications, and take a deeper look at the email applications as I feel I did not get to the buttum yesterday.

The premises are still, that I’m limited to my Nokia 6610i phone, and the apps which function on that one. Furthermore, there seems to be a significant difference between what the website getjar reports compatible, and what I can’t find compatible (maybe a firmware problem).

I’ve been trying out three applications which I could make work: the hardcore no nonsense email, and the servicebased Flurrymail and Movamail.

Yesterday I was very positive about Simon Judge’s “email”, and I still really like that it takes up so little memory and that it is a fully blown client without the need for signing up for a service. It has however some series limitations. First of all, it does not support html mail. Second I could not make it work with several of my email accounts (including my Gmail), my guess is that this is due to Gmail only accepting encrypted connections. The application serves its purpose, if one can accept these limitations and that the look isn’t “polished”.

Flurrymail is the first of the service based email systems; I covered this in detail yesterday. I will just say that the interface is absolutely excellent. It not only looks, but it seems that everything has been thought through. On signs up very fast with the email address and the password for the email account. I did so with my Gmail account and it worked right away. Adding to this the interface on the phone is very intuitive.
If one goes to the website it is possible to add further email accounts and to news feeds via rss. Yesterday I was very positive about this feature, but I only tried it today. I signed up for my 6-7 favourite feeds, and when I tried it on the phone this morning it turned out that the feeds a shown as emails on the phone. This makes it very hard to find the emails and apparently caused some of my mails to not be loaded to the phone, since I encountered a limit around 60-70 messages. So this is absolutely not a full rss client, I’ve unsubscribed to all the feeds now, and is just using it as a mail client.

Movamail are in some points very similar to Flurrymail, since it is also a service. It just takes a lot longer to sign up, and depending on where you are from in the world it is only free for 60 days. The app looks very well, but I don’t find the control as intuitive as Flurrymail (but this probably differ according to the phone). It is claimed on the website that Movamail is faster than many other apps, I would guess that this should be due to compression, but I do not see this difference in loading times between Movamail and Flurrymail. If any I would say that Flurrymail is the fastest.

After trying the apllications a little more, there is very clear which one I will be using from now on. The limitations in Simon Judge’s email are too big, even though it does count in its favour that it is a complete client. Flurrymail seemed to be the most functional in the interface, both on the website and on my Nokia, and it is free.

That was just my 2 cents let me hear what you have to say.

Entry Filed under: Cell phone, Java Applications, Mobile, email, tech

7 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Tech Tag » Gmail mo&hellip  |  July 4th, 2006 at 3:28 am

    [...] I’ve just noticed, that Google has opened for mobile access to Gmail. This means that by pointing any cell phone browser at http://m.gmail.com it should be possible to check any Gmail account. This provides a nice alternative for the email applications for cell phones I’ve posted on ealier. [...]

  • 2. Tech Tag » Trying o&hellip  |  July 5th, 2006 at 3:48 am

    [...] With Gmail mobile access up and running I think I prefer this to the other E-mail solutions I’ve tried out, for the reasons given yesterday, and because it has the great search option. [...]

  • 3. LC  |  July 28th, 2006 at 1:12 pm

    I prefer Movamail by far. I disagree with above and felt that it was much easier to set-up, and it was much faster then the others. Since I have more then one email, Gmail does not cut it.
    LC

  • 4. mobgeek  |  October 30th, 2006 at 3:32 pm

    Agreed, Movamail is much better than Flurrymail. Just look at the interface that flurry has, yuck!

    You can get movamail at http://www.movamail.com, didn’t see a link for it…

  • 5. mastermobile  |  October 30th, 2006 at 11:12 pm

    Great thread, movamail is good it worked on my phone just like a blackberry.

  • 6. jens  |  October 31st, 2006 at 7:49 am

    I would still pick Flurrymail any day.
    Because of
    1)User interface – it integrates better with my old Nokia 6610i, ths same buttons are used for the same thing, and so on.
    2)I found much easier to set up
    3)It is cheaper

  • 7. LC  |  November 6th, 2006 at 2:34 am

    Disagree. Flurry is certainly not easier to setup. I have not been charged anything for movamail… so far its been free. So, in dont know how there is anything better then free. Flurry has RSS integration, but does anyone really use RSS other then the geeks?
    LC

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