pda-ppc.com
 
MENU
Search
 Astronomy
 Business
 Calculator
 Clock/calendar
 Communication
 Database
 Docs
 Educational
 Financial
 Games
 Graphics
 Hobbies
 Medical
 Misc/fun
 Multimedia
 Quiz
 Religion
 Travel
 Utilities




Digg this - Post page to del.icio.us - Post page to Furl



Over-the-Air Puts Mobile Email Over-the-Top

In 1982, a man named Geoff Goodfellow conceived of a way to send messages from Arpanet, the Internet's precursor, to alphanumeric pagers, the precursor to today's smart phones. He announced his idea in a message called "Electronic Mail for People on the Move," which was sent out via an Arpanet mailing list. Compared with today's wireless mobile services, of course, Goodfellow's invention may seem somewhat quaint. But anyone who's sent email from a mobile device owes this man a debt of gratitude.

Goodfellow's idea was eventually patented by a company that later sued Blackberry maker RIM after that company popularized wireless, mobile access to email. Regardless of the origins, of course, the genie is out of the bottle, and today it's possible to access email wireless, or over-the-air (OTA), from a variety of mobile devices running on a number of mobile platforms. Apple has recently gained some notoriety for pushing OTA email, calendaring, and contacts functionality to businesses via Microsoft Exchange, but also to consumers via a service called MobileMe.

I rushed over to the iPhone like the trendy lemming that I am in mid-2007, and I've recently updated to the slightly enhanced iPhone 3G, which adds support for Exchange and MobileMe. But I've also been testing OTA access to Exchange via a Windows Mobile 6.1-based device, a Samsung BlackJack II. These modern entries in the OTA sweepstakes prove that Goodfellow's innovative idea was as brilliant as it was obvious, as he once described it. This is the way everyone will access email in the future. If they're not doing so already, that is.

To understand what I mean by that, consider how mobile sync has evolved over the years since the early days of the Palm, Windows CE/Pocket PC/Windows Mobile, or whatever mobile platform you prefer. Until fairly recently, mobile devices were PC companion products, things that had to be tethered to a PC in order for information to be transferred in either direction. The relationship was also one of master and slave, with the PC in the master role: You would create and maintain important databases like your contacts list and schedule on the PC and sync them to the device. Yes, you could make changes on the device, too. But everything revolved around the PC.

There were side issues to this technique as well. Depending on the device type you chose, you might have had to use intermediary software on the PC to get data out of native applications like Outlook before they could be used and understood by the device. Some of these solutions, like Palm Desktop, were so horrific they still cause involuntary spasms in those who were forced to deal with their weird inconsistencies and peculiarities. More recent entries, like Apple's iTunes--a curious choice for syncing with mobile data devices, when you think about it--are just as bad.

OTA changes everything. Instead of tethering a device to your PC, the device itself becomes a first class citizen in your computing experience. On the device, you can type in your name, email address, and password, and connect to an Exchange server wirelessly, using server auto-configuration. Contacts, email, tasks, and calendaring information are synced instantly and effortlessly. (Well, at least for the user. Server-side Exchange configuration of this information remains a bit confusing, in my opinion.)

As you roam about, information that's changed on the device is automatically replicated back to the server. So the device becomes just another window to this data, equal and identical to other windows, such as Outlook Web Access (OWA) in a browser or Outlook on your PC. In fact, you don't ever have to use a PC at all. Increasingly, I suspect more and more people will do just that, as devices get more sophisticated and as a coming generation of smart phone-only users matures.

OK, I'm an old timer. But I do get a lot of email, so I use OTA access to do what I call "email triage." If I'm standing in a line at the airport or otherwise have time to kill when I'm on the road, I can move through my inbox, moving, reading, and deleting email as needed. I'm not much for typing long messages on a smart phone's tiny keyboard, but many are, and they can live their entire email lives on such a device. I save the long messages for the PC. But the choice is wonderful, and when I do access email on the PC, I do so having already removed most of the non-essential messages.

Thanks, Mr. Goodfellow.



Submitted Date: Sep 04, 2008
Source: Windows IT Pro

Suggestion about this article. Report this article


  News, Articles and Press Releases
 •  TechFaith and QIGI Launch i6-Goal, First Android-Powered Phone in China (Dec 02, 2008)
 •  Movie Collector v4.84 (Nov 29, 2008)
 •  Alarm Master now available also for Windows Mobile with touchscreen (Nov 26, 2008)
 •  Eltima Software has released SyncMate vers 1.4! (Nov 22, 2008)
 •  XemiCo Today Calendar Paints Your Busy Days in Color (Nov 21, 2008)
 •  Spb Wireless Monitor 3.0 for WM Treos (Nov 21, 2008)
 •  Wyse Introduces New Virtualization Software for Integrated Voice, Data and Video Delivery via Virtual Clients for Enterprise and Cloud Computing (Nov 20, 2008)
 •  MONITORING: Spb Software launches Spb Wireless Monitor 3.0 for Windows Mobile (Nov 19, 2008)
 •  Mark/Space Announces The Missing Sync for Windows Mobile With Enhanced Entourage 2008 Support (Nov 19, 2008)
 •  PhatNotes and Calligrapher Win Again, Taking Top Category Honors in Smartphone & Pocket PC Magazine's Best Software Awards (Nov 19, 2008)
 •  More News ...
  Latest software update
 •  Odometer Recorder 1.5 (Dec 02, 2008)
 •  zBfIDE 1.6 (Dec 02, 2008)
 •  Perfect Balance 1.2 (Dec 02, 2008)
 •  PricePicker 1.1 (Dec 02, 2008)
 •  RushHour 5.1 (Nov 29, 2008)
 •  iLap 0.10 beta (Nov 29, 2008)
 •  DeviceDownloader 1.0 (Nov 29, 2008)
 •  TouchResponse 02.2 (Nov 29, 2008)
 •  Cash Diary 1.6 (Nov 27, 2008)
 •  AC time tools (Nov 27, 2008)
 •  Cube 0.6b (Nov 27, 2008)
 •  XWords 4.2 beta 6 (Nov 27, 2008)
 •  BlueTunes 1.1.0 (Nov 25, 2008)
 •  A3VS DVD Catalyst 1.0.2 (Nov 25, 2008)
 •  WifiLocations 0.6 (Nov 25, 2008)
 •  Notification Repeat Enable 1.0 (Nov 25, 2008)
 •  BeMario (Nov 22, 2008)
 •  hTorch 3.2 (Nov 22, 2008)
 •  CronTaskEditor 1.3.1 (Nov 22, 2008)
 •  AutoLog 2.0.1 (Nov 22, 2008)
Add to Favorite Home Submit Freeware Send Mail