If you're disappointed by Microsoft's Windows 8 Mail app, help could
soon be on the way in the shape of a Windows Store version of TouchDown,
the popular mobile mail app.
Microsoft's default Windows Store email client for Windows 8 is
pretty basic. It's slowly gaining features, but it's no match for the
email clients we've grown used to over the years.
That's not a problem for Windows 8 on the desktop, where it quickly
becomes a secondary tool for sharing email from other Windows Store
apps, and most email ends up being handled by Outlook or Exchange, or
whatever you were using before you upgraded.
Unfortunately for Windows RT that's not the case: we're stuck using
the Mail app and left comparing it unfavourably to the mail clients on
our smartphones and pining for the desktop mail clients of old. There are rumours of an Outlook RT under development, but no timescale for it appearing on our slates.
Of course, there are alternatives in the shape of web clients for
popular services, and IE 10's support for offline working can come in
handy here (especially if your mail lives on an Exchange 2013 server,
where you can take advantage of the new offline version of the Outlook
Web App). But none of them have the same capabilities as a full-blown
desktop mail client — something that comes in handy at 38,000 feet in
the air…
So we were pleased to hear last year that the folks at NitroDesk
were planning to bring their TouchDown mail app to Windows 8 and
Windows RT. We were even happier to install the beta code on our test
Surface tablets. TouchDown for Windows 8 running on a Microsoft Surface Windows RT tablet.
Now the beta's public,
though you'll need to install a Windows 8 developer licence on your
device before it can run, as TouchDown is not yet in the Windows Store.
Luckily much of the process has been automated by NitroDesk, with a
simple installation script that handles much of the process for you —
from downloading, to starting the developer licence process (all you
need is your Microsoft Account details, and you'll be able to run
TouchDown for a month until you need to get a fresh licence).
If you use Android and have to connect to an Exchange server, you're
probably familiar with TouchDown. An Exchange ActiveSync email client
from a small team of ex-Microsoft staff, it's consistently been our
Android mail client of choice (especially when, as it often does, the
Android team breaks something in its own EAS client code). With support
for Android tablets, as well as phones, and recently for iOS, TouchDown
is ideally placed to make the jump to Windows 8.
Like Outlook, TouchDown brings email, contacts, calendar, tasks and
notes into a single app. You can sync mail from your Exchange server to
your Windows 8 device — without affecting data from the Mail, Calendar
and People apps, as TouchDown uses its own database for Exchange data. TouchDown's calendar view.Slide up from the bottom of the
screen to open a contextual app bar. Mail can be flagged and tagged, and
there are filters to help you show only unread mail, as well as a
folder view that lets you choose what folders to sync. You can also
choose to switch between a day view and a week view for calendars. Early
versions had very few options, but the latest builds have added many
more features and configuration tools to go with them. With support for
IRM on the horizon, and with many other enterprise security features
being added, TouchDown for Windows 8 looks to be the missing enterprise
mail client that Windows RT devices like the Surface have been crying
out for.
If you do decide to try out the beta, don't rely on it for all your
mail. This is beta code that's still changing, and to make sure you
understand this, each time you start up you're shown a changelog that
lets you know when to download a new version. There are still rough
edges in the TouchDown beta, and you'll need to update regularly as the
team fixes bugs and rolls out new code — especially as it adds improved
security policy support. We're not entirely sure about the rounded
corners in the panes in the app, a design point that harkens after
TouchDown's original Android version. It's a little disconcerting
compared to the clean right-angles of Windows 8's modern design. Download the beta from the NitroDesk web site.When finished and finally approved
by the Windows Store (we understand it's recently been submitted),
TouchDown on Windows 8 — and especially Windows RT — looks as though it
will be close to the mobile mail app Windows 8 needs. Even as an early
beta, it's functional, fast and, above all, gives you many of the
features conspicuously missing from Microsoft's own Mail app. Windows 8 needs more Windows Store
apps like this: apps that push the envelope and show that you can use
the WinRT environment to deliver enterprise-grade code that doesn't hide
features or simply clone a website or reformat a news feed.
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