Attachment viewing, printing, and faxing for Windows Mobile and Symbian handhelds
Monday, February 12, 2007
In addition to Direct Push e-mail accounts, the business platform Cortado now offers Premium Services for viewing, printing, and faxing documents, e-mails, and attachments

Mobile enterprise computing experts ThinPrint will be presenting their Cortado Premium services for Windows mobile and Symbian handhelds for the first time, at the 3GSM in Barcelona (Hall 2, Stand 2,1D55, 1st floor). Individual handheld users can book services now at www.cortado.com. These services can be used for viewing documents, e.g e-mail attachments, on a display, without prior download, or for sending them directly from a handheld to a printer, fax machine, or a laptop screen. The Cortado Shortfax function allows users to compose and send faxes whilst on the go. Cortado Premium Services cost 7.98 Euro each per month, and are also available for a 10-day, no obligation, trial period. The services can be selectively used with the user’s own e-mail account or a Push e-mail account hosted by Cortado.
The Premium Services support all handhelds with Windows Mobile 5.0 Pocket PC Edition or Symbian s60 3rd Edition operating systems. This includes T-Mobile MDAs, Vodafone’s VPA, O2, xda models, the Palm Treo 750v, HP IPAQ, a number of pocket PCs on the market, as well as nearly all Nokia E- and N-Series models, such as the Nokia E50, E60, E61, E62, E70, N71, N75, N80, N91, N92, N93, and N73.
"Whether it’s about viewing a Power Point attachment received via e-mail, faxing a contract, or printing specific documents: Now individual users can also turn their handhelds into mobile offices“, says Dirk Löwenberg, Business Director at Cortado Services. „Because none of the services require document download and the data is transferred highly compressed, the cost of the data transfer is moderate.”
Cortado Premium Services can be booked, or tested, here.
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*The utilization of the picture is free of charge if and insofar as it is used in the context of editorial coverage of Cortado.
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