Emoze launches free push email for all Gmail users
By Will Park on Tuesday, August 28th, 2007 at 12:55 PM PST In Announcements, Applications, Services

If you’ve been dying to check out emoze’s free push email service, but just don’t have the means to get a dedicated Outlook Exchange Server up and running, you’re time is now! The famous emoze Push Email service has just been expanded to Gmail. Anyone with a Gmail account can now use the service to have their Gmail inbox “pushed” to their mobile phone.
The simple Emoze software download is non-Java based, meaning you’ll get a faster, stabler (yes it’s a word, we just made it up), and more reliable. Says emoze CEO, Benny Ballin, “Gmail is one of the top email services in the world and we’re recognising the trend of business people and small firms using their Gmail as their main and functional business email account. For those that are more technically astute, they will appreciate that our application is not Java-based. This approach helps to significantly improve reliability, stability and performance of wireless devices such as battery consumption, CPU load and memory usage. By using the native contact and calendar clients of each handset as shipped by the handset vendor, we ensure the best possible user experience.
You can download the emoze client directly to your mobile phone by pointing your mobile browser to http://mobile.emoze.com/. Or, just head on over to http://www.emoze.com/ and find out if your mobile phone is compatible.
[Via: Slashphone]


Oren Here from emoze
Thanks for the mention, Your support is always greatly appreciated. We’ve recently launched the emoze community forum where you can catch up with the latest developments
and features or just meet other emoze users from all over.
Your comments and suggestions are always greatly appreciated!
Cheers
emozeoren
Is emoze a killer app for blackberry?
Three words: Blackberry Internet Services.
Other free solutions will, unfortunatelly, eat you battery very quickly. Not to mention that BB usually has a flat data plan included (via dedicated APN), while “free” solutions will cost you extra (for general data transfer, very rarely flat rate).