MailWave 1.0.5.30 (for Palm OS)
MailWave 1.0.5.30 (for Palm OS)
Tom Denton of Hilton Development Group, a mytreo.net Star Developer, is pleased to announce the commercial release of MailWave version 1.0.5.30 for the Palm OS! MailWave is perhaps the very best push e-mail client for palmOne Treo 600 & Treo 650 smartphones to provide wireless access to both IMAP4 and POP3 enabled servers. Advanced features such as Inbox synchronization, and calendar and task viewing provide the mobile worker with valuable information while on the road. Unlike other mail applications with high upfront prices, with MailWave there is no upfront cost whatsoever and a small monthly service charge.
skarface101: It's so bad, it's laughable. And the Mailwave site is down half the time. They just basically want to charge you to forward your mail. Agree with ronwbrown - get chattermail, it rocks!
ronwbrown: MAilwave sucks!! to have a middleman server hold my email account login information, and do all connections to the mailserver and relay it to PDA!!?? I think NOT!!! and want to charge monthly for it... JUST PLAIN STUPID!! get chattermail...
Detailed Description
MailWave provides wireless access to IMAP4 and POP3 enabled servers. Advanced features such as Inbox synchronization, and calendar and task viewing provide the mobile worker with valuable information while on the road.
MailWave supports multiple networks, email servers, and wireless devices providing a very flexible wireless email solution. MailWave is a powerful wireless email access solution with advanced features such as push style message delivery, stylus free operation, and attachment downloading. Deploy MailWave to a single user or the entire enterprise quickly and securely using over the air activation.
New Features
- Multiple account pushing
- Easy access to Trash purge menu item
- Treo 650 compatible
- 2day compatible
- File attachment uploading (Public Beta Library release) Automatic Sent category management Individual account polling server syncing override settings Various bug fixes, stability, and navigation improvements
MailWave Features
- Download and save attachments to device or SD card
- 2day compatible
- Behind the firewall enterprise solution option
- Hosted solution for small businesses and individuals
- Scalable to thousands of wireless users
- Multi-vendor email server support
- Multi-network support
- Efficient over the air email delivery
- Bi-directional IMAP4 synchronization of messages
- Multiple devices supported
- Centralized system management for administrators
- Web based user profile and filters
- Advanced filtering managed by the end user
- Email is pushed to the device when connected
- Push style email delivery or SMS notification
- Distributed servers with 3DES encryption
- SMTP Authentication support
- Private VPN lines available for hosted solution
- Direct messaging option requires no email server for devices
- Message disposition notification support (Read/Delivery/Reply)
- IMAP4 folder syncing
- AOL, Exchange, GroupWise, Lotus, Oracle, Sun, and Seattle Labs compatible
- GroupWise Trusted Application support
Small businesses and individuals can benefit from wireless e-mail without the need to deploy expensive infrastructure. MailWave Hosted Services allow users to subscribe to wireless e-mail access using their Palm based devices. Test your email address today!
- No server on premises required
- E-mail looks like it comes from your desktop
- 99.9% uptime with 24/7 monitoring
- Low monthly service fee per device
- Web based account management
- Works with most POP3 or IMAP4 servers, which is what most ISP and companies use
Businesses with a fulltime IT staff or desire to have a MailWave server behind their firewall may do so. Along with all the benefits of the Hosted Services, companies can have complete control of e-mail delivery options, user management, and filter settings.
- Scalable depending on demand
- GroupWise Trusted Application support
- End to end encryption
- Communicates with most POP3 or IMAP4 servers
Compatible with: Treo 600, Treo 650 | Last updated: 12 Feb, 2005