Loading Bars

Now with 3.0 goodness 
« Back to blog

Email on iPhone?

For those of you on this planet who use an iPhone of some sort, or an iPod touch, how often do you use it for email? Do you find yourself using the built in email app just to read emails, or do you have a separate, dedicated device for email like a Blackberry? How many of you actually use it as your full time mobile email solution?

 I've recently discovered that the majority members of the iPhone user group in Indonesia are also avid Blackberry users.

 User groups in Indonesia are still primarily based on mailing lists thanks to the proliferation of slow and unreliable Internet connection until just recently. The influx and growth of gray market Blackberries lend further support and lifeline to the use of mailing lists whereas in more developed parts of the world mailing lists are on the way out being replaced by message boards or forums.

 Blackberries, coupled with affordable unlimited data plan make the perfect email and chat devices, so much so that they are not primarily considered as business tools in this part of the world. They have become core communications tool among the haves and the upper range of the middle class.

 I find this trend of dual smartphone ownership rather intriguing I ended up doing an entire podcast episode on this very topic but that is not what this piece is about.

 This is about the capability of Apple's mobile Mail program.

 iPhones and iPod touches have a workable email program. It's far from perfect but it does the job.

 Mail app in the iPhone OS lets you set up accounts from various providers such as Apple's own MobileMe, Gmail, Yahoo!, AOL, a Microsoft exchange account, or from your own domain or ISP. With certain email providers, it lets you get your emails via the push method like in a Blackberry. With others, you can set Mail to fetch your emails every time you load that account.

 Now to cut to the chase, here are reasons why I think Apple's mobile Mail app is not ready for prime time yet.

 1. No mark as flagged
Often you get emails with instructions, alerts or notices or just the ones you need to reread more carefully later. These are the kinds you'd want to keep and make sure you read again in the near future. Without a flag, it's easy to miss them.

 2. No mark as read
Mobile Mail, just like its desktop sibling, shows you how many unread messages you have via a red badge on its application icon. Having this displayed would often ring a bell in your head as if saying "C'mon read me, go ahead, I dare ya."

 3. No search
Perhaps for a good reason. Mobile mail can only display a limited number of messages at any one time. Newer messages will push oldest ones out of the list. The maximum number of emails shown is 200. A search that goes back only 200 messages may be not so effective although it will still be useful up to a point.

 4. No attachment
Well this point is not entirely true. Mail does support receiving and previewing the most common types of attachments such as microsoft office documents, images, sounds, and PDF files. However to this point Mail does not allow sending an attachment of any kind except pictures stored in the photo library. If you have a PDF of any kind or documents stored using a third party file storage application, you can't attach them to emails. Apple currently doesn't allow this feature to be implemented. Even text files made using a writing app are sent as the body text of the email, not as attachments.

 5. Limited storage
Mail only allows displaying up to 200 emails as the older ones are removed from the phone's database. This sort of forces people to use IMAP service to keep their emails up to date although this is actually a good thing. What's not good is if you're the type of person who rely a lot on emails, being limited to 200 emails at a time may just restrict your communications.

 These are some of the reasons why I've switched my emailing activities on my iPhone from Mail to Gmail mobile. It solves all but one of the five issues above while giving me Gmail's threaded view which is in my opinion the best way to keep things in context.

 Until Apple solves or provides a workaround for those problems, the Mail app does not present itself as a compelling email application. Usable but not enough for a full time email client.

Loading mentions Retweet

Comments (9)

Jan 31, 2009
randi said...
I regularly use my iPhone mail app. :as you recon, I'm not a receiver of too many e-mail: and I utilize the gmail filter system. and splitting your e-mail accounts does help too...
Jan 31, 2009
Aulia Masna said...
Talk about making my point for me and also irony, I linked to this post to the id-iphone mailing list and they ALL replied there mostly via their Blackberries instead of leaving comments here despite my request. :D LOL
Jan 31, 2009
nOta said...
I use both BB and iPhone. Yes I try to use iPhone to manage my emails. Unfortunately, I subscribe many mailing list and the total daily emails may reached 300-400 (I know its not much for some of you but for me its a lot). Scanning so much emails will be easier on text basis like BB and would take longer time if you do it in iPhone.
Moreover the unlimited BB access package in Indonesia together with its compression, BB is more economical than iPhone non compressive and per kB data charging.
But except for email I certainly think iPhone the best gadget. I think iPhone is more like an iPod with telephony features not the other way around.
Jan 31, 2009
robby yanto sudjana said...
Nice article and good point of views,
I will leave my comments in indonesian, I feel more comfortable writing in indonesian,
( sorry for my poor english).

tambahan lagi kelemahan iphone untuk email adalah baterainya.
Dengan 3G on dan push mail, saya set 4 email di iphone. Setting 200 mail untuk tiap email account.
Baterai tahan dari pagi sampe siang aja. atau kurang lebih sekitar 6 jam sebelum indicator menunjukkan 20%.
status vibrate juga on , sehingga setiap email masuk akan vibrate.

Jan 31, 2009
Brett Petersel said...
I would guess that about 60-70% of my use of the iPhone is email related. I get about 500-700 work related emails and 50 personal emails a day. I don't have any problems, because I don't use my iPhone to draft lengthy epistles. I can't understand why, when we have complete synergy between platforms, anyone would want to go through the misery of tapping out a lengthy email on a tiny keyboard or on a touch-screen.

I haven't had any problems with the supposed 200 email limit. I say supposed, because I haven't actually encountered any problems. There are workarounds. My archive folder has several thousand emails.

Flagging? In the 10+ years I have been using Office, I have never used the flag function. Flags are extremely limited in their functionality. I was interested to see how the iPhone Mail app treats the stars and labels from Gmail: it creates folders for them. I use a similar system, based on GTD. I have folders, e.g. @review, @respond, @today and use the Mail app's "move to" function to "flag" emails according to what needs to be done. This syncs with Outlook nicely.

On the upside, I find reading emails on the iPhone much easier than on a Blackberry. Huge touch screen, WISIWYG, pinch, flick... Compared to Blackberry? Yeuch!

So... I disagree. As a business user, I think the iPhone mail app is fine. Not being able to attach files to an email is something that should be fixed, along with copy-paste. But these two issues relate to the OS itself, so I can't imagine its going to change until 3.0.

EVERY system has its limitations. Just because it doesn't suit one person doesn't mean it needs to be changed.

Feb 01, 2009
gadgetgalz said...
After using a whole bunch of different operating systems and gadgets, the winner of all easy-and-mobile-techie-stuff-with-durable-and-reliable-connection-yet-affordable is a Blackberry device.

Sometimes it's hard to believe that to check and keep your emails on an iPhone is less than it should've been (since I've had high hopes for it), and yet the battery drain and lack there of a good internet (data) and voice service is pretty limited and got higher cost than anything else regular.

Still an iPhone is a must-have gadget, the best one available for its mobile browsing which later I've fond to use to check my webmails.

Bottom line, a webmail check on iPhone compares to push/fetch mail... Better a webmail.. LoL..

This is just one's opinion..

Feb 01, 2009
orakanggo said...
Mo komen dalam indo ya bro Aul...

BB sangat "perfect" untuk kalangan enterprise terutama yang pake exchange ato domino dimana tidak hanya push email aja tapi juga calender dan contacts.

Dan Apple masih bermain setengah hati untuk urusan ini.
Saya ambil contoh di iPhone hanya support Exchange server yang sudah dibuka OWA-nya dan belum menyentuh mail server enterprise yang lain like domino.

Kalo emang bener2 serius mo nyaingin BB secara head to head paling tidak sih Apple bikin divisi baru push mail yang bener2 bisa megang dan ngerancang inti dari komponen push email yaitu relay server dan push connector(kalo di BB namanya BES).

Kalo itu sudah terjadi saya yakin iPhoners bakal 100% pake iphone buat urusan per-email-an tentunya udah disertai daya tahan batere

Feb 03, 2009
fisto said...
why don't RIM and Apple just work together and deliver a hybrid phone? *daydreaming*

Leave a comment...

 
Got an account with one of these? Login here, or just enter your comment below.
Posterous-login    Connect    twitter