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Email on the Nokia E75

   

 

The Eseries range of Nokia devices have always proudly touted their Email handling capabilities. The Nokia E75 though, takes this one step further with a new version of Nokia Messaging (formerly known as Nokia Email) onboard.

Email on the Nokia E75

Configuring email on your E75 couldnt be easier. There are however, a couple niggles here and there though.

Here’s how Nokia’s newest Eseries device handles Email.

Introduction :

The Email client is one of the first icons you’ll see on the Main menu. This is of course considering you didnt already see the “Set up Email” icon on the Main Home Screen, when you first use your device.

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Even though Nokia themselves have stated that this is a newer version of Nokia Messaging, the email client still quaintly (and thankfully) calls itself “Email. If you go to the About menu, it makes no mention of Nokia Messaging, and any Email services you add here in this Client, are not added to your Nokia Messaging Account Online (atleast if you previously already had an account there, like we did). This is a slight niggle for people who already use Nokia Messaging previously (only because you’ll have to re-add your inboxes here), but if you’re starting new with the E75, it shouldnt make any difference to you at all. Of course, this might still change by the time the E75 is released later this month, but it really isnt a big deal to be honest. This is still an improved version of Nokia Messaging though, no matter what name they decided to call it.

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To add your email-service-of-choice to the Email Client, all you have to do is start it up and Select “New“.

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This will take you to the “Add Email” Wizard. Alternately, if you clicked the “Setup Email” link on the homescreen, you’ll be taken here directly.

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This is where things gets really easy. Once you select “Start”, you’ll have to enter in your Email address. The Nokia Email application automaticallyconfigures itself according to the email address you’ve entered in, and adds your Email service as an Icon in the Email Client’s Main menu.

If it doesnt recognise your Email Service though, it’ll ask you to input more settings so that it can work with it. We’ll explain this in more detail later in this post.

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

From the Main Menu of the Email Client you have a couple options to play around with. You can open an Email Service to check your inbox for that service, Synchronise all your different Email Services, or Connect/Disconnect all services.

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

There’s also a Help Menu present, but we doubt you’d need to use it. Ever.

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Viewing your Inbox and Emails :

Coming to Email Services, When you click on a service’s Icon you’re taken to the Inbox view by default. Let’s take Gmail into consideration here.

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From the Inbox, you can go to any other folder, depending on the service, or just switch to another email service directly.

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

And that’s not all. By default, your Email is arranged according to date. But if you would want to arrange it by other methods, you have a couple options for that too.

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Not too bad.

Now once you’re at your Email Service Inbox, you have the usual Options. You can compose a new email, mark and delete emails, etc.

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Another thing to note is that, by default your emails are all expanded according to their mini-catergories. Under date view for example, each email is listed under the date it was received on, and this view is expanded by default. You can choose to collapse these mini-catergories, thankfully, which makes scrolling through your emails a little less tedious, if you have a large amount of them like we did.

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Now when you actually do open up an email to view it, you’re not shown the HTML version of it by default (if it is an html email). You’re shown a standard view with a link that says “Show HTML version”. You’ll either love to hate this ‘feature’ but it would have been nice if Nokia had let us set it to always show html version or not.

Point to note, when you open up an email from someone, you have the option of adding that email address to your address book via a tiny icon on the right side.

The Standard view :

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

The HTML view :

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Composing Emails :

Writing or Composing an email is pretty much what you’d expect. All the options you’d need are there.

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A nice touch in the recipient field is, as you type an email address or name, the client searches your phone contacts for a match, and if that person has an email address listed under his entry, it’s automatically added.

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Everything else works like you’d expect it to. You can add attachments, set priority, add more recipients, save to drafts, insert a template, etc.

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Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

There are also a  couple settings pertaining to Input, but we’ll cover that in more detail in an upcoming post.

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Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

And of course, there’s Copy-Paste. A standard feature on S60 devices.

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Settings :

We cant talk about an Email Service, without talking about the settings that it has to work with.

There are two main types of settings in the Email Client. One is Global Settings, pertaining to all services, and the other is service specific settings, which depends on the email service.

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These are also accesible though your Inbox.

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Global Settings has a few options that you can play around with.

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Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

The more detailed settings though, are in the Email service Specific settings. We’ll be taking our Gmail Inbox into account here. You have Mailbox Settings, What to Sync and When to Sync.

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The titles speak for themselves really.

Mailbox settings are options that pertain to your mailbox. You can set your Display Name, Signature, etc.

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Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Under advanced mailbox settings though, is a lot more to tinker with, pertaining with your incoming and outgoing mail settings.

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You can set which access point each setting uses (by default it asks you before checking), along with port and security settings. This is really useful, as you can set it to use only one set of access points (via Fp2′s Destinations feature) instead of asking you each time, or to only check for new mail when you’re in your Home Network.

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Coming back to the “What to Sync” option, this is where you can define…. what to sync. You can set your retrieval amount, Emails to retrieve, etc.

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

The “When To Sync” option comes in really useful. Here is where you can tell the Client, when to carry out it’s auto-sync feature.

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

This can come in useful if you’re a bit paranoid about battery and dont want the E75 constantly checking for new Email. The update Interval can be anything from 5 Minutes, to once a Day.

Homescreen Integration :

Now this is where things got a little weird. I love that you can directly see the status of your inboxes on your Homescreen, that’s something that has been standard on Eseries devices for a while now, and we wish would be seen on more upcoming Nseries devices too.

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However, this is the part of the Email Client that goes a little crazy. If you get new email, you’re alerted (via the sound you’ve set for that event in your profiles) and you’ll see that little notification on your Homescreen. The problem is though, once you view your new Email, you can only exit the email. You cant directly go to your Inbox from there, or anything else, which seems like something most people would do. Definitely something the developers didnt thing about, and definitely something they should fix. It’s slightly annoying but not a deal breaker.

Nokia E75 Review Pictures - Share on Ovi

Another thing that’s annoying, is that even if you’ve read an email, it’ll still be listed as a new email in the Homescreen plugin (not in the Email Client though). This remains the case, until your next sync. Very very annoying. I’ve found myself constantly being fooled into checking for a new email, only to find it’s an old email that is being shown as new on the Homescreen.

Both these ‘problems’ can be easily fixed with a software update, or application update for the Email Client.

Conclusion :

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Email on the E75 is a pretty pleasant experience, baring the fixable homescreen annoyances we faced. Emails were pulled in properly, according to the set time interval, and we didnt face any syncing problems at all. It could have been a bit easier to find the “When and What to Sync” settings though, because right now you have to manual search through each Email service to change them.

Nokia have definitely worked hard on the Email Client and it shows. It just adds to the great business device package that the Nokia E75 is.

   

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Author Description

Clinton Jeff

Clinton is currently based in New Delhi, India and is executive editor for UnleashThePhones. He is responsible for all editorial decisions, and covers all forms of Mobile and mobile-related accessories. Cj is addicted to caffeine, social media, and technology. Always up for a good conversation, you can reach him through the contact form, his website, on Google Plus or on Facebook or Twitter:

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can u help me as i am unable to select my memory card option as storage of messages...

if i select Momery card to save mesages nokia e75 wont work/select , what will be the problem ..my memory cark works properly with songs and all other application only messages are not saved in memory...pls suggest

i have 5 email account 2 Hotmail and 2 Gmail if i receive on Hotmail i have a notification but if i receive on the 2nd one i don't have notification because i can see only 2 emails on my home screen? what shall i do and how i can rename my account???

i have 5 email account 2 Hotmail and 2 Gmail if i receive on Hotmail i have a notification but if i receive on the 2nd one i don't have notification because i can see only 2 emails on my home screen? what shall i do and how i can rename my account???

Is there a way to synchronize your mail addresses in G Mail or Hotmail to the devise. Now we will be able to browse and attach the mail ids saved in address book

How about settings for Yahoo Mail? I tried everything I found on the internet but none of them worked. I setup'd Gmail with no problem but Yahoo just doesn't wanna work.

Hi. I bought an E75 2 weeks back. I am trying to configure my corporate email to my phone. We don't have Mail for Exchange so I think I can't use that option. Or can I?Anyways, we have a corporate webmail account as well. I had it configured on my E51 and E65 as well. But somehow I am not able to configure it on the E75. After the entire configuration is done, I don't see the incoming mail server and outgoing mail server option any where. I checked out the advanced mail box settings and all I see there is 'Port' and "Secure connection". I know I need to configure the incoming & outgoing mail server settings in order to make it work. But its missing. Any suggestions?

useful review - thanks

Hey There Grant. If you go to Control Panel --> Settings --> Connection you should see "Destinations" listed there. You can sort and add/remove access points from each "category", etc.

Hi. Your review talks about a "Fp2’s Destinations feature". I cannot find out about this anywhere. Currently MfE will only use a specific access point. How do I point it at a destination group?

CJ,That is not true. E-mail on E-75 is push if you configure it through http://email.nokia.com. The cost of Nokia email.nokia.com is included in the E-75 price. If you configured email manually without going to email.nokia.com, then, definitely the email is not push, as you said.I have my email configured through email.nokia.com and always emails are delivered immediately to my E-75, often much before they show up in my PC e-mail client.HOWEVER, I am surprised at your E-75 battery review???? E-75 has the crapiest battery life I had ever seen. First I thought my unit was defective, but second unit after excahnge, and even third unit after exchange behaved same. I use GPRS, Exchange one account and Yahoo Gmail and Live Mail configure through email.nokia.com. The battery last only 4-5 hours. It goes dead during the mid of the day. I checked Nokia Discussion board at nokia.com and it is universal problem. I am not unique to it.Battery life is the let-down. In fact, let-down is too soft a term to use for our experience. The E75 comes with a 1000mAh battery, which is only two-thirds the capacity of the battery in the E71. Charging the phone to full and activating push email for one MS Exchange account and one infrequently used private account was enough to drain the battery in less than 24 hours. If you're in the habit of charging your phone overnight you'll find it back on the charger each evening, otherwise you'll find the phone powers down before you get home. Worse still, the on-screen battery monitor is tremendously flawed — we've found the battery dropping from full to empty with very little notice, the middle bars of the display barely get a look in.The saving grace is the profile switcher that lives as a shortcut on the Active Standby Bar by default. This switcher activates a second phone profile that can be completely customised with new wallpapers, ringtones and themes, and with different active email accounts. You can have, for example, your MS Exchange account on one profile, and your Yahoo, Hotmail or Gmail on the other. We've found when we switched the profile to the second profile with no push email active that the battery lasted an extra day or two. But doesn't this defeat the purpose of buying a "messaging" phone?

Yeah I really cant believe they've forced us all to stick to Phone memory. Here's hoping for an update soon which lets us choose memory card as storage !

Thanks for the response on moving emails to junk. It works! The only thing that still troubles me is Andreas's problem about selecting the memory card as the default storage point for emails. I can't get it to work either. My phone memory is filling up...Nokia, HELP US!

Hey there Julius. That's weird, it offers that option on my E75. If you go to Settings-->Gmail-->Mailbox Settings-->Advanced Mailbox Settings and choose either Incoming or Outgoing Email settings, you should be able to choose "Always Ask" under "Access Point in Use".I hope that helps :)

How do you get it to always ask what connection to use (Note that this is for Hotmail and Gmail mailboxes, it doesn't let you choose "Always ask".) The phone keeps going to my gprs connection whenever i ask it to connect or retrieve mails. Anyone noticed this and have solutions?

I totally agree!! That's something stupid I didn't expect from a non-windows using company. If anyone has found a way to fix this please inform me!! Thanks

I totally agree!! That's something stupid I didn't expect from a non-windows using company. If anyone has found a way to fix this please inform me!! Thanks

Hey there !I'm not entirely sure if this will work, but you can try going to your mailbox (eg: Gmail) and going to settings. Under there, navigate to "What to Sync" and choose "Folder Subscriptions". Let it connect with your mailbox server and update, and choose your spam folder to let it be listed.After that, you can choose "move email to" and move it to the spam folder to get rid of it :) Hope that helps !

Great review! Quick question: I haven't quite figured out how to move messages to 'Junk'. Any inputs?

To bad you cant decide yourself where to stor the mail (Memory card or on the phone memory). If u get lots of mails(like me), the memory on the phone gets full and it stops with the exchange connection. VERY VERY annoying. Hope they fix it. So for the moment you can only store on the phone memory and not on the memory card. Got this for the keyboard and to write fast mails, but now its just no good for the mail part as the memory gets full 2 easy.

On E51, when we use email in POP, for instance, Gmail, setting the device checking mails each 1 or 2 hours, we receive an email now and read it and it will be kept in the inbox, however when E51 checking the mails again at next time, the mails what in inbox previously will be cleaned up, it means we can not read them in our E51 again.Does it happen the same situation on E75?Thanks Jon

Great Nokia Messaging review. Your theme really makes some of the views hard to see - like the status screen "Hotmail Connected". Still a great review. I don't think Nokia had to work very hard to get Nokia Messaging to where its at currently. Most of the hard work has been done via their server (Mail on Ovi & Nokia Messaging PC site). The actual client is based off the award winning IntelliSync client - you can tell in the App Manager program. The entire layout is very similar ... but the new HTML support is DEFINITELY welcome news indeed. Was there any word on when this new client will be available for those of us that prefer the E71 to upgrade? Thanks. PS I've been following Nokia Beta since it spawned from IntelliSync but not so much since then, so I'm a bit behind.

Hey Donny, Sorry about that. It's the default E75 theme which i didnt think about changing lol. I really havent a clue as to when they will be releasing this update across all Nokia Messaging Devices. I'm hoping it comes out as the E75 hits stores next month but nothing guaranteed I'm afraid.

Great Nokia Messaging review. Your theme really makes some of the views hard to see - like the status screen "Hotmail Connected". Still a great review. I don't think Nokia had to work very hard to get Nokia Messaging to where its at currently. Most of the hard work has been done via their server (Mail on Ovi & Nokia Messaging PC site). The actual client is based off the award winning IntelliSync client - you can tell in the App Manager program. The entire layout is very similar ... but the new HTML support is DEFINITELY welcome news indeed. Was there any word on when this new client will be available for those of us that prefer the E71 to upgrade? Thanks. PS I've been following Nokia Beta since it spawned from IntelliSync but not so much since then, so I'm a bit behind.

Hey Donny, Sorry about that. It's the default E75 theme which i didnt think about changing lol. I really havent a clue as to when they will be releasing this update across all Nokia Messaging Devices. I'm hoping it comes out as the E75 hits stores next month but nothing guaranteed I'm afraid.

Hi. As a lifelong Nokia user, it's been difficult adjusting to a Blackberry (Curve 8900). However, the necessity for seamless, reliable and almost faultless Email means that I had no choice. How reliable is Nokia's new Email offering? BB very rarely fails (I use BIS for both company email and Gmail) and works well. In addition, with 'Documents To Go', you've got a very handy document editing facility as well. Has Nokia got an edit facility yet? Would absolutely love to revert to a Nokia (either E71 or E75), but only if the Email feature is up to scratch.

Hey there Saj ! It's pretty hard to compare Nokia's Messaging service to BIS though. Nokia's solution isnt really true "push" email, meaning your emails will not go instantaneously unless specified to, and any emails you received wont be sent to your inbox instantaneously either, just during the interval check that you specify. Regarding reliability, as long as you have a network signal (if you're using your network's Edge, GPRS or 3G) or a Wifi connection around, you'll have a means of 'staying connected'. The Nokia Email service worked fine for us throughout our testing period, but remember it's a "free" (atleast for now) service, so downtimes might be present occasionally. Regarding editing files, the E75 has a full corporate version of QuickOffice which you can use to create, edit and view your word, presentation and other office files.

Hi Cj. Thanks for the response, much appreciated. Doesn't Nokia's email use IMAP? Saj.

Hey Saj ! Just a bit of change to my previous comment. I was just contacted and corrected that the Client on the E75 does indeed do push and that I had set up a direct-access account inadvertently. I cant really go into more detail about it at this time though.

Hi. As a lifelong Nokia user, it's been difficult adjusting to a Blackberry (Curve 8900). However, the necessity for seamless, reliable and almost faultless Email means that I had no choice. How reliable is Nokia's new Email offering? BB very rarely fails (I use BIS for both company email and Gmail) and works well. In addition, with 'Documents To Go', you've got a very handy document editing facility as well. Has Nokia got an edit facility yet? Would absolutely love to revert to a Nokia (either E71 or E75), but only if the Email feature is up to scratch.

Hey there Saj ! It's pretty hard to compare Nokia's Messaging service to BIS though. Nokia's solution isnt really true "push" email, meaning your emails will not go instantaneously unless specified to, and any emails you received wont be sent to your inbox instantaneously either, just during the interval check that you specify. Regarding reliability, as long as you have a network signal (if you're using your network's Edge, GPRS or 3G) or a Wifi connection around, you'll have a means of 'staying connected'. The Nokia Email service worked fine for us throughout our testing period, but remember it's a "free" (atleast for now) service, so downtimes might be present occasionally. Regarding editing files, the E75 has a full corporate version of QuickOffice which you can use to create, edit and view your word, presentation and other office files.

Hi Cj. Thanks for the response, much appreciated. Doesn't Nokia's email use IMAP? Saj.

Hey Saj ! Just a bit of change to my previous comment. I was just contacted and corrected that the Client on the E75 does indeed do push and that I had set up a direct-access account inadvertently. I cant really go into more detail about it at this time though.

Hi Cj, Nice review. Thanks for that. When you reply to a HTML mail, does it lose all the formatting and go as plain text or it will remain the same HTML version? I use windows mobile and use HTML exchange push mail extensively. Planning to change to Nokia if the mail client is going to be on par with MS. Thanks in advance. Sankar

Hey Sankar ! Good question, it never occurred to me to try that. Unfortunately, when you reply to an HTML message, it is changed to plain text in the reply 'mode', and when you send the message, the original HTML is added in as an attachment, along with whatever text you added in as a reply.

Thanks a lot Cj! I guess I will go back and search for a better windows mobile as my HTC vox is almost broken. :)

Hi Cj, Nice review. Thanks for that. When you reply to a HTML mail, does it lose all the formatting and go as plain text or it will remain the same HTML version? I use windows mobile and use HTML exchange push mail extensively. Planning to change to Nokia if the mail client is going to be on par with MS. Thanks in advance. Sankar

Hey Sankar ! Good question, it never occurred to me to try that. Unfortunately, when you reply to an HTML message, it is changed to plain text in the reply 'mode', and when you send the message, the original HTML is added in as an attachment, along with whatever text you added in as a reply.

Thanks a lot Cj! I guess I will go back and search for a better windows mobile as my HTC vox is almost broken. :)

Nice Review. Great to see Hotmail addition, When this new version is going to be released for other phones? e.g E71

Hey Suyog ! To be honest, it's all up to the Nokia Messaging crew. I'm hoping it'll roll out when the E75's officially released and in stores, because it's really much improved !

Nice Review. Great to see Hotmail addition, When this new version is going to be released for other phones? e.g E71

Hey Suyog ! To be honest, it's all up to the Nokia Messaging crew. I'm hoping it'll roll out when the E75's officially released and in stores, because it's really much improved !

I would like clarification if possible. I have read reports that the email delivery to this new Nokia email client is instantaneous, similar to the Blackberry push email service. But I have also read reviews supporting that emails are pulled in according to the set time interval as you stated in your review. Can you confirm that the new Nokia email client does not have that push/instantaneous email feature?

Hey Spencer, Unfortunately, it's not Push. You can choose to manually connect, and send an email instantaneously. But you can only receive emails when you manually connect, or during the set time interval. I.E : You cant get emails as soon as they arrive in your inbox.

I would like clarification if possible. I have read reports that the email delivery to this new Nokia email client is instantaneous, similar to the Blackberry push email service. But I have also read reviews supporting that emails are pulled in according to the set time interval as you stated in your review. Can you confirm that the new Nokia email client does not have that push/instantaneous email feature?

Hey Spencer, Unfortunately, it's not Push. You can choose to manually connect, and send an email instantaneously. But you can only receive emails when you manually connect, or during the set time interval. I.E : You cant get emails as soon as they arrive in your inbox.

Hey Cj, great to read this summary. I liked the Cj Kingdom access point ;-) Could you tell me what server settings are used for Mail on Ovi?

Dude ! Where have you been ? It's been ages. Hope this means you've back now lol. The Mail on Ovi server settings are : Incoming email settings : Incoming mail server : Imap.mail.ovi.com Security : On (SSL/TLS) Port : Default Outgoing email settings : outgoing mail server : smtp.mail.ovi.com security : On (SSL/TLS) port : Default Hope that helps !

Hey Cj, great to read this summary. I liked the Cj Kingdom access point ;-) Could you tell me what server settings are used for Mail on Ovi?

Trackbacks

  1. [...] you as excited about Nokia’s new Emailing service as Cj is? Over at his blog, he’s composed the Ultimate Bible of Nokia Email. Everything you could possibly need to know about the new emailing service: setup, sending, [...]

  2. [...] das nur bei dem Vorführgerät so. Neue Screens vom neuen Mail-Client des E75 findet ihr hier. Was mir persönlich auffällt, dass man dem E75 ruhig mal paar neue dezente erfrischende [...]

  3. [...] could have written an entire post here. However, fellow Nokia blogger CJ has already posted the Ultimate Bible of Nokia Email on the E75, and I don’t think I can do a better job than that! Nokia Email on the E75 finally [...]

  4. [...] at just that; a premium email client geared toward personal use as opposed to enterprise. … Email on the Nokia E75 | ZOMG its CjMar 19, 2009 … The Eseries range of Nokia devices have always proudly touted their Email [...]

  5. [...] to come with Nokia Messaging fully integrated into the email client. However, Clinton at ZOMGitsCJ beat me to it, with over 30 screenshots showing everything you never wanted to know about the version of Nokia [...]

  6. [...] One thing that the E75 does extremely well, is Email. Mostly thanks to the built in Nokia Messaging Push-Enabled Client. To know more about this section, check out our Email on the Nokia E75 post. [...]

  7. [...] in detail before, we wont get into that again. But if you wish, you can take a look at our Detailed look at Email on the Nokia E75, since it uses basically the same version of Nokia [...]

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