PicoMail for BlackBerry, Symbian, and Java 0
6:00 PMPicoMail is a fast, feature rich and free mobile email application for any Java (J2ME, MIDP 2.0) or Symbian cellphone. Supporting easy email account configuration, HTML messages, attachments, automatic spam filtering, search, hyperlinks, security and much more, PicoMail is a great mobile email application for any cellphone user and, best of all, it's free! PicoMail features include:
- Reading and writing plain text and HTML email messages - Images, including GIF, JPEG, PNG, TIFF, BMP formats - Zoom, Fullsize, Save, SMS and OCR images - Setup multiple email accounts (Gmail, Yahoo, Hotmail, AOL, OVI, 163.com, mail.ru, ...) - Email protocols: POP3, IMAP, SMTP (secure and non- secure) - Simple email account configuration - Follow links within email messages - Keyword search - Attachment viewing, including Word, Excel, WordPerfect, image, ZIP and PDF - Save attachments and messages to phone, send attachments from phone - Send attachments, images over SMS - Form autofill - Offline composition of email messages - File explorer to view files on the phone - Audio and video playback - Automatic spam filtering - Contact list import - Compression to reduce wireless data charges - Support for Unicode and many character encodings Visit http://www.picowireless.com for more details about PicoMail and other free mobile applications from PicoWireless.
Install Free
Source (download.com)
Not long ago, my colleague Rafe Needleman ranked a handful of native Google Voice applications for mobile phones, declaring Google's own Google Voice app for Android phones the winner. No big surprise there, as Google owns both the voice service and the mobile operating system, and can snugly fit the Google Voice dialing option into the native dialer. Let's throw another app into the mix, this time it's a Palm WebOS app called gDial Pro.
The free gDial Pro Google Voice client has been around in a homebrew version for a while (a version you can install outside of the App Catalog environment,) and recently became available in Palm's App Catalog. It is a glossy, dark-themed app that, rather than replicate the in-box design of Google's Android app, concentrates on outgoing calls and texts, in addition to a communication history.
gDial Pro opens to a dialpad view where you can start dialing a number, select a contact from the phone's address book, or begin typing a name on the keypad to pull up Google Voice contacts. The contacts' names and numbers won't automatically transfer into the Palm's native address book (for that you're better off syncing the Palm with your Google account), but the app integrates them into WebOS's universal search.
Back in gDial Pro, a navigation ribbon on the bottom jumps you to the SMS view; the in-box where you can sort by SMS, voice mail, and missed communications; and to your favorites. We especially like the Web view, which opens the mobile online version of Google Voice so you can refer back to it from time to time.
It's true that gDial Pro doesn't have the tight integration that Google's Android app has. Like most alternatives, it requires using its own dialpad to engage the Google Voice service; otherwise, you'll be going through the carrier. However, It does, make things simpler by offering a smoother connection via the optional Web dial feature. The Web dialing feature operates over Wi-Fi or the carrier's data connection. Like dialing over a voice connection, the Web dial method also prompts Google Voice to call your phone to connect to the service, but it's less clunky. Voice dialing uses Google Voice's automated-attendant voice mail system to place calls. Unfortunately, Web dialing won't work if you're in an area with weak data signal or if you're roaming without a data agreement--in these cases, you'll have to use the alternative method to place calls with Google Voice.
While the dialer isn't as seamless as Google's Android app, gDial Pro's Google Voice client is the best choice for Palm WebOS device owners. Another free Google Voice app, p2GoogleVoice, challenges gDial Pro from both the homebrew side and from the App Catalog, but without Web dial or an in-box, it only originates calls and texts. Until Google releases an official Google Voice application for Palm WebOS, gDial Pro is your best choice.
The free gDial Pro Google Voice client has been around in a homebrew version for a while (a version you can install outside of the App Catalog environment,) and recently became available in Palm's App Catalog. It is a glossy, dark-themed app that, rather than replicate the in-box design of Google's Android app, concentrates on outgoing calls and texts, in addition to a communication history.
gDial Pro opens to a dialpad view where you can start dialing a number, select a contact from the phone's address book, or begin typing a name on the keypad to pull up Google Voice contacts. The contacts' names and numbers won't automatically transfer into the Palm's native address book (for that you're better off syncing the Palm with your Google account), but the app integrates them into WebOS's universal search.
Back in gDial Pro, a navigation ribbon on the bottom jumps you to the SMS view; the in-box where you can sort by SMS, voice mail, and missed communications; and to your favorites. We especially like the Web view, which opens the mobile online version of Google Voice so you can refer back to it from time to time.
It's true that gDial Pro doesn't have the tight integration that Google's Android app has. Like most alternatives, it requires using its own dialpad to engage the Google Voice service; otherwise, you'll be going through the carrier. However, It does, make things simpler by offering a smoother connection via the optional Web dial feature. The Web dialing feature operates over Wi-Fi or the carrier's data connection. Like dialing over a voice connection, the Web dial method also prompts Google Voice to call your phone to connect to the service, but it's less clunky. Voice dialing uses Google Voice's automated-attendant voice mail system to place calls. Unfortunately, Web dialing won't work if you're in an area with weak data signal or if you're roaming without a data agreement--in these cases, you'll have to use the alternative method to place calls with Google Voice.
While the dialer isn't as seamless as Google's Android app, gDial Pro's Google Voice client is the best choice for Palm WebOS device owners. Another free Google Voice app, p2GoogleVoice, challenges gDial Pro from both the homebrew side and from the App Catalog, but without Web dial or an in-box, it only originates calls and texts. Until Google releases an official Google Voice application for Palm WebOS, gDial Pro is your best choice.
Mobile Number Locator traces the information about any mobile number code like Service Provider, State, or Reference City. It is useful for tracing out from where a user got a missed call. Mobile Number Locator is valid for India only.
Download
Download
Azan Times for Worldwide Prayers for Mobile Phone is used to listen Azan (Athan, Adhan, Azaan) automatically on every prayer time (Namaz, Namaaz, Salat) five times a day on your mobile phone (Cell Phone, Windows Mobile, Pocket PC, and Symbian OS). It has Prayer Times and Qiblah direction for more than 25,000 Cities in 252 countries and islands worldwide. It is fully customized to add any city in the world. It features multiple beautiful Azan sounds, minutes adjustment to the prayer times. Added automatic launch feature..
Download
Download
- 2008 - 2009 Download Games Mobile Free.
- Download Games Mobile Free designed by Download Games Mobile Free.
- Powered by Blogger.com.