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Still, I could skim down the list in my in-box and tap the checkboxes for e-mails that I want to quickly delete. But check boxes like that aren't always standard in other Android e-mail apps. Nor does it address another pet peeve, how "conversation view" is often missing. Let's get conversationalGiven that Google's Gmail service helped popularize the idea of viewing e-mail by conversation or topic, rather than simply by date received, you'd think a conversation view feature would be standard for Android phones. It's not. Consider.
On the right is my same in-box again, this time as it appeared on the Galaxy Nexus that I own, It has no conversation view, As a result, my mailing list discussion is so spread out that two in the conversation don't appear unless I scroll down, That's why I have those two arrows going down the page, The staff discussion is also broken up, uag monarch premium iphone x protective case - carbon fibre with two messages visibile as the two arrows show while the third is off the screen, So much inconsistencyYou might be thinking that the differences are due to the fact that the Droid Bionic runs Android 2.3 while the Galaxy Nexus runs Android 4.0, That's not it, Different Android versions don't control how the Android e-mail app works, Different handset makers do..
Samsung makes the Galaxy Nexus, which lacks a conversation view. Samsung also makes the Galaxy S II Skyrocket that I own, an Android 2.3 phone that does have conversation view. Samsung also makes the Droid Charge, the Android 2.3 phone I had before I changed to the Galaxy Nexus. It has conversation view, like the Skyrocket. However, it differs in other ways. With the Droid Charge, a tick-box appears next to each e-mail message in your in-box, similar to how both Android in-boxes shown above appear. You can easily delete e-mails by ticking the boxes and pushing the delete button. With the Skyrocket, you have to do the opposite. You select the menu to reveal the delete button, then pushing that makes the tick-boxes appear. After picking what you want to trash, you then go back to the delete button and push it again. That process slows things down.
There are yet more maddening problems, The Galaxy Nexus (as does the Transformer Prime) has reply buttons in the e-mails that scroll off the screen, making you waste time going back up if you want to send a response, My review of the Galaxy Nexus explains this more and some other e-mail problems, No, the Gmail app is not the solutionOne reason I suspect that the Android e-mail app gets overlooked is that uag monarch premium iphone x protective case - carbon fibre Google offers its own Gmail app for Android. Surely that covers everything! In fact, the Android site features Gmail as an app and makes no mention of the e-mail app at all..
Certainly when I complain about the poor e-mail experience on Android, I sometimes hear from other Android users that I should just use the Gmail app. But the Gmail app not the answer. Not everyone uses Gmail. Not everyone likes how Gmail blends all messages in a conversation into a single view. Sometimes, you want to drop out some of a conversation but not all of it. Speaking of Gmail, it would be really nice if Android e-mail apps could recognize a Google Apps account--which is basically Gmail but using your own domain--and automatically configure this correctly. The iPhone and iPad manage it. Even Windows Phone manages it. But the e-mail apps on Android phones inevitably ask me to manually adjust my IMAP and SMTP settings.
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