• On The Insider: Bruno Film Edited Due to Jackson's Death
The Download Blog
advertisement
October 10, 2008 9:18 AM PDT

Zoho Mail: Mobile, offline, and out of beta

by Stephen Shankland

Zoho Mail, out of private beta testing, works on the Apple iPhone.

Zoho Mail, out of private beta testing, works on the Apple iPhone.

(Credit: Zoho)

Zoho made some significant changes to a core part of its cloud-based application suite Friday: its online mail application now works offline and with Apple's iPhone, and the beta test is now publicly available.

The offline and mobile features are major areas of development for Web-based applications, and cloud computing advocates including Zoho, Yahoo, and Google are racing to build in those features. Offline access helps ameliorate Web-based applications' limitations when no network is available, and mobile access helps fulfill one of the big promised advantages of Web applications: access your documents any time you do have network access.

Offline access, which in Zoho's case is enabled with Google's Gears technology, lets people read and write mail in the browser even when not connected to the network. "Zoho Mail automatically detects your connectivity and switches to online/offline modes seamlessly. While offline, you can respond to your emails as you would normally. When you go back online these emails will be sent out from your outbox," the company said Friday in an announcement.

Easier said than done, perhaps: I just got an indefinite "Loading..." message in both Google Chrome and in Gears-enabled Firefox when trying to access my mail after I shut off my network.

(Update 10:30 a.m. PDT: I thought I'd gone through the offline settings properly, but evidently I hadn't. It does in fact work, mostly, caching messages on my PC and automatically adapting according to whether there's a network. I could write new mails, though Zoho Mail only saves them to the draft folder instead of queuing them up to be sent. And when I tried to reply to an e-mail, I got the error message, "Sorry, this feature is not supported while you are offline!")

And mobile support, while difficult given the primitive state of most mobile devices' Web browsers, can also help when people don't have access to a PC or a Wi-Fi network. "We do plan to support other mobile devices soon," Zoho said. The application worked fine on my iPhone.

Zoho Mail can be accessed with other e-mail clients using the POP (Post Office Protocol) today; the more powerful IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol) support is "coming soon."

It has no storage limits or ads. Users can opt to organize mail with either labels, a la Gmail, or Folders, a la Hotmail and Yahoo Mail. And back-and-forth exchanges can be viewed either with Outlook's conventional style or Gmail's conversation view. Also adopted are some Outlook keyboard shortcuts, such as Control-Enter to send a message. The application worked for me, though I missed Yahoo Mail's drag-and-drop abilities and Gmail's stand-out filtering options.

People who sign up for the e-mail get a "username@zoho.com" e-mail address. And through the AdventNet subsidiary's business offering, customers can use Zoho Mail with their own domain.

Zoho's Web-based e-mail client uses Google's Gears to enable offline access to messages. (Click to enlarge.)

Zoho's Web-based e-mail client uses Google's Gears to enable offline access to messages. (Click to enlarge.)

(Credit: CNET News)

Originally posted at Webware
Stephen Shankland writes about a wide range of technology and products, but has a particular focus on browsers and digital photography. He joined CNET News in 1998 and since then also has covered Google, Yahoo, servers, supercomputing, Linux and open-source software, and science. E-mail Stephen, or follow him on Twitter at http://www.twitter.com/stshank.
Recent posts from The Download Blog
Create photo presentations and race 4x4s off road: iPhone apps of the week
Chrome OS for the clueless: What it means for real people
Manage multiple Twitter accounts with your iPhone
Silverlight 3 debuts ahead of Friday's launch
Selected Search speeds up on-page searching
Android ringtone swap: First Look video
Archive your e-mail from almost any account
An epitaph for the Web standard, XHTML 2
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by srikanthramu October 13, 2008 7:43 AM PDT
Thanks for the detailed post. Zoho Mail supports FF & IE, however you would be able to work with Offline mode in Chrome. Also we are now working on enabling Send and Reply option in offline mode and this would be out soon. Regarding the issue of viewing Mails when not connected, could you try visiting http://mail.zoho.com/mail/offline.html and let us know if you were able to view the mails.

Srikanth
http://zoho.com
Reply to this comment
by iVisiter November 3, 2008 10:07 AM PST
This looks really cool and I can't wait to try it out.

Readers who find interest in ZoHo Mail would probably also find a lot of interest in http://mboxmail.com which lets you get your Hotmail straight to you iPhone in a very easy way.
Reply to this comment

Search Download Blog posts

advertisement

About The Download Blog

Download.com editors cover the world of downloadable software and beyond.

Add this feed to your online news reader

The Download Blog topics