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October 24, 2005 7:26 AM PDT

Cingular pumps up wireless IM, e-mail

  • 5 comments
Cingular Wireless is bringing mobile e-mail to the masses.

The company, which is jointly owned by BellSouth and SBC Communications, on Monday announced that it will offer e-mail and instant messaging from America Online, Yahoo and MSN on cell phones.

Using a downloadable e-mail client powered by OZ Communications that converts the e-mail into a format that can be seen on the small screen, Cingular subscribers can access their personal e-mail from their phones. Unlike other e-mail services targeted at business customers that require expensive devices, such as Research In Motion's BlackBerry or Palm's Treo, Cingular customers will be able to use less-expensive cell phones from Cingular's current line-up.

Initially, the e-mail service will be available on many of the most popular Motorola devices, such as the V180, V220, V400, V551 and Razr V3. The Mobile IM service will also available on these phones, as well as others, like Nokia's 6230 and 6620 and Sony Ericsson's Z500 and S710a handsets. More compatible handsets for both the e-mail and IM service will be added soon.

Wireless users have been able to access Web-based e-mail on cell phones for a while, but the process has been cumbersome. By contrast, RIM's BlackBerry and services for smart devices like the Treo make accessing e-mail simple.

"E-mail and instant messaging are the 'killer apps' of the Internet," Jim Ryan, vice president of consumer data services for Cingular Wireless, said in a statement. "Now, with the new Mobile E-mail and Mobile IM applications from Cingular, we are enabling over 10 million of our existing customers with the ability to get to their existing e-mail and IM services through a set of easy-to-use clients--anytime, anywhere, from their existing phones. These are truly mass market solutions."

Cingular will not charge an additional monthly fee to use the new services. But customers must subscribe to a monthly wireless Internet package with different amounts of data usage available. Customers can pay kilobyte usage charges for Mobile E-mail, or a per-message charge for IM. Cingular has put together two packages, one of $9.99 per month, and the other for $19.99 per month, which it says should cover the needs of most of its customers.

See more CNET content tagged:
Cingular Wireless, BellSouth Corp., IM, Research In Motion Ltd., RIM BlackBerry

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great, but ...
by ablocker October 24, 2005 9:03 AM PDT
I would be far, far happier if it worked with any POP or IMAP mail service (a la BB web client). Still a great start.
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whatever!
by October 24, 2005 9:22 AM PDT
wheres my 3G compact flash transceiver?
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hmm...
by djpaisley October 24, 2005 9:24 AM PDT
are they going to be adding advertisements like they do to the Multimedia messages? Also when are they going to come out with unlimited Text like other carriers?
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cool, but..
by Roman12 October 24, 2005 1:15 PM PDT
This is a great idea, and it would be cool to use IM on a phone. But I don't thing this will become too popular because most mobile phones dont have a button for every letter and it would make instant messeging harder, and slow. Plus the costs of using internet from your phone. I think using text messeging to communicate is hard/slow enough already. When I sign in on my computer, there are at least 3 people that a conversation with me. I can't even imagine having to respond to all the incoming conversations with the people on your list when using a mobile phone.
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http://www.Remove-All-Spyware.com/
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Still a work in progress
by sxxxy247 November 7, 2005 12:44 PM PST
I've tried the Mobile IM on my Sony Ericsson z500a and I received about 500 corrupted emails, just while trying to set it up.
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