[..]Google Releases New Zoho Service: Mail with Offline Support[..]
Yes, you read it right: the first announcement of Zoho Mail’s general availability, with Google Gears-based offline support did not come from Zoho, but from the Google Gears team, which released this video discussing Zoho’s use of Google Gears, synchronization, the Marketplace and a lot more a bit prematurely:
Somewhat used to it (see TechCrunch Releases New Zoho Service: Invoice) the Zoho folks decided to play along and released their own announcement.
This announcement somewhat symbolizes the interesting dynamics between Zoho and Google: competitors, yet collaborators. ReadWriteWeb is probably right:
But also Google probably sees Zoho less as a competitor at this point (even though Zoho does compete directly against Google Apps) and more as an evangelist for its technology - such as Google Gears.
(Talk about dynamics, this is the time to disclose the Zoho is CloudAve’s exclusive sponsor. We strive to be independent to the point that we barely ever discuss our sponsor here. In fact I wrote about them only once. But this is an important announcement, besides, I am actually quite critical of Zoho Mail – read on to find why – so I guess that makes for a balanced view, sponsorhip aside.)
First of all what’s in today’s announcement:
So with all that, why am I unhappy? I’m a die-hard Gmail fan, mostly for its productivity boosting features:
Zoho Mail handles the latter two well, but I am not too happy with the way conversation threading works. My business conversations last weeks, include dozens of emails, and on a traditional mail system the threads are basically a pain to put together before responding to someone. Gmail handles it automagically, and as a side-effect, it presents a lot more information on it’s list screen - since the dozen individual emails are now compressed into one line.
But we all have different usage patterns. When debating the importance of threads, I looked at other Zoho Mail users whose conversations are typically one-off, so they won’t value threading feature at all. In fact not everyone needs productivity. Not everyone wants to go through a paradigm change.
AOL, YAHOO, Hotmail are the absolute web-mail market leaders,and they should do whatever it takes to keep their customers. Their mainstream users are corporate employees who use Outlook in the Office, whether they like it or not is irrelevant, they are used to it. When they go home, they may not email a lot. Some will check their emails daily, once a week, or less. They want a personal email that resembles to what they already know. For them familiarity is more important than productivity.
As much as I hate to admit it, I am NOT the mainstream Zoho customer. I am probably more a part of the TechCrunch 53,651 (even though it’s 1M now) than the mainstream customer base Zoho targets. And if it wasn’t clear before, the current crisis brought home the message loud and clear: only businesses with real revenues survive. Which probably means that for all my yelling and screaming, Zoho is quite right coming out with an email system that meets the needs of businesses who actually pay for it. After all, this is what enables them to offer all the other apps I like for free. And I like free. ![]()
[..]Google Releases New Zoho Service: Mail with Offline Support[..]
Everybody seems to be 'upgrading' their webmail, lately... But the most user- friendly service -to my way of thinking- remains Gmail; because of its POP emulation, I can use the client I prefer (Opera's M2). No fuss, no muss. The Gears connection isn't all that new. (Think Mr.Postman and other kludges that bring your webmail to your desktop.) Will it benefit some? Certainly, some who don't have and wouldn't know what to do with an email client. What doesn't change about webmail is an interface you must get used to and its 'one-step-at-a-time' navigation. That said, Zoho's implementation is pretty good. Still, it rankles that they write this: "View your mail conversations using Conversation View without loosing the existing mails status and order in the Inbox View." People who think a spell-check will keep you from looking stupid don't know the half of it...
Post Comment