|

Home

Mobile Email @ 10x

GPRS
Accelerator

How it works

mailSpeed FAQs

Going abroad?

Save money

Specials

About Orate

Resources

Site Map
|
 |
MailSpeed was specifically designed
and optimised for sending and receiving mobile e-mail through
a dial up GSM, GPRS, CDMA or TDMA mobile connection - but works
equally well with fixed network connections - so if you cannot get ADSL,
you need mailSpeed!
As mailSpeed is an e-mail dedicated service, the network is designed to be used with PC-based
desktop and laptop or notebook computers using leading mail browsers,
such as Microsoft Outlook and Outlook Express, Lotus and Eudora
- ensuring that the vast majority of users can use the mailSpeed
network.
Once installed
on your notebook, laptop or PC, the mailSpeed client software
will communicate with the mailSpeed network hub servers and together
they will transform the way your mail is being handled, sent and
received. To achieve the remarkable increase in communications
speed, a number of techniques are used, some public and some proprietary:
- Reconfiguration of transport
packets, their size and number - which reduces the amount of data
that needs to be sent in addition to the relevant data: great for
savings on GPRS roaming!
- A series of highly sophisticated compression technologies - to compress and reduces the
size of the actual data being sent.
- Prioritising content to be sent, which optimises
connection time by sending the smallest e-mails first and the
largest files last.
- Full duplex transmission saves valuable time, network
capacity and cost.
- Auto Restore function is particularly valuable for
users that use mailSpeed on their lap-tops to connect through
mobile networks such as GSM. Mobile connections are regularly
subject to disruptions that terminate the connection and when this
happens in the middle of sending and/or receiving data, it is
necessary to reconnect and start the process all over again. The
unique Auto Restore function of the mailSpeed network however,
enables data transfer to start at the point of disruption, saving
a great deal of time and costs over and above the already fast
transmission times.
This will
save you a lot of money travelling nationally, but if you travel
internationally, the savings on international phone calls is huge!
|
 |
|