Showing posts with label GMail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GMail. Show all posts

Monday, 2 July 2007

Google's new version of online Docs, Spreadsheets, Folders

"It's only a matter of time before Google unveils a full-fledged online operating system" according to Cade Metz in register.uk. Google rolled out a new version of Docs & Spreadsheets - its online answer to MS Word & Excel - adding Windows-like folders, an improved search engine, and an all-around interface.

Previously, Docs & Spreadsheets organised files using a tagging method reminiscent of Gmail, Google's web-based email client. With the addition of folders, the service feels much more like a classic desktop GUI. You can even move documents from folder to folder via drag and drop.

"Almost from the day we launched people have been clamoring for folders," wrote technical lead Ron Schneider, on the official Google Docs & Spreadsheets blog. In other words, they weren't into the tags thing. One user summed it up quite nicely on the Google discussion forum. "Folders is a great move," he said. "Everyone knows what folders are, but tags/labels still don't make sense to my Dad and others."

If you're already using the service, your old document tags are automatically converted into folders. But there's one aspect of the old paradigm that's still around. In much the same way you could attach the same file to multiple tags under the original interface, you can now store the same file in multiple folders. You'll also find specialized folders that give you quick access to all the documents you've created (as opposed to those created by someone else) and to the documents you've shared with others. The new search engine suggests possible matches as you type - much like the Google Suggest beta that ties into the company's main web search engine. Docs & Spreadsheets new look-and-feel - including revamped icons and organisational controls - is also an improvement, but some users still have complaints.

Google CEO Eric Schmidt has said the company will eventually add a PowerPoint-like presentation builder to its online office suite. Over the past two weeks, the company added a PowerPoint viewer to Gmail and announced the acquisition of Zenter, a startup with an existing online presentation tool."

Wednesday, 27 June 2007

Free Push Email Application with Five Mobile Accounts Comes to India

Hotmail®, Yahoo!®, AOL® Email and Google Mail™, plus Corporate Email pushed to Mobile Phones using a Single Application on any Data Network. From Mumbai to Bangalore and all across India, a free* version of the popular mobile email application, Consilient Pushª is now available. This marks the first time the Canadian company Consilient®, with regional offices in Singapore, has made a free version of their technology available in India. The mobile application is available at www.consilient.com.

The popular service features multi-account access, giving users a single application for accessing up to five different mail accounts on mobile phones. The Push application supports Wi-Fi access and can run on any data network, including Bharti Airtel, Reliance India Mobile, BSNL, Hutchison, IDEA and Tata Mobile.

Features of Consilient Push:

5 Email account access: personal and corporate in single application (one email account access for BlackBerry® and Windows Mobile devices only)
Yahoo!, Hotmail, AOL & Gmail - Plus POP3 and IMAP4 access

Personal Themes - personalize email application with pictures and color coding
MP3 ring tones for new email notification
Easy to use Account Management Profile
Photo attaching, saving, sending, receiving, viewing

Phone "lock and wipe clean" if lost or stolen
Personal signatures
Easy to set up: download sent via SMS

Attachment support for all file types

Consilient Push delivers mobile email for Hotmail, Yahoo!, Google Mail and AOL. The application also supports any POP3 or IMAP4 account, providing a single mobile application for corporate and personal mobile email use. Users can download the application on their existing mobile phones and move between personal and corporate email accounts using color codes. The Push service also has attachment support (ZIP, MS Word, PDF & Excel) and uses 128-bit encryption.

"We are very excited to bring our mobile email application to the Indian market, one of the fastest growing mobile markets in the world," said Trevor Adey, Consilient CEO. "People can now run mobile email for up to five accounts on their everyday mobile phones. This gives the Indian market a fresh, free alternative for mobile messaging," Adey added.

Consilient's underlying technology is push-based and is designed to be easy-to-use on popular mobile phones including Nokia, Samsung and Windows Mobile devices. No email or passwords are stored with Consilient - the technology acts as an instant relay pushing email out in real-time. The Push application can be quickly downloaded onto most popular mobile phones in seconds. * requires data plan or Wi-Fi access.

How to get Push:

Sign up at www.consilient.com, Receive one SMS to your mobile phone. Click on link in SMS - accept "yes" to allow application to run on network. A Premium version of Consilient Push is available for $5 USD/month. Consilient Push uses open standards (LEMONADE/P-IMAP) and is available in a scalable version for mobile operators and ISPs.

About Consilient®

Consilient is a leading developer of push email, multimedia and advertising for mobile phones. Consilient was founded in 2000 and has offices in Asia, North America and Europe. For more information, go to www.consilient.com.

press release.