Raj Agrawal

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You are here: Home / Technology / Receiving Emails And Feeds On SMS For Free

Receiving Emails And Feeds On SMS For Free

November 2, 2008 by Raj Agrawal 3 Comments

Nokia 1110i is super cool when it comes to speed and simplicity. Being a Nokia 1110i.user, i’ve always enjoyed the browsing speed and the comfortable keypad. For me, It’s basically a fixed version of Nokia 1100. Even though this black and white phone is stripped to only calling, messaging and with a better version of Snake for entertainment, it doesn’t stop me from receiving my mails and recent feeds on my mobile. The trick is for all who.use a simple phone with no GPRS access and is also.useful for mobiles with GPRS.

SMS Notification

There are two services that I am considering, one being only for phone numbers in India and the other one for USA and Canada.

I will start of with the service for phone numbers in India.

For receiving new mails on SMS, you need to free your Gmail feed from the usual authentication (yes, you have a feed for your email account too).

For regular feeds, apart from Freeing your feed, all the steps to be followed are the same.

Google SMS Channels (Currently for India only)

I have tested this trick only on Gmail accounts and works as smooth as whiskey. It should work for other Webmail services too. Though the updates are not in real time, it usually takes 5-10 minutes to arrive as SMS.

Generic Gmail feed link – https://mail.google.com/mail/feed/atom

The feeds for other webmail services can be found with Google search.

  • Get started:
  1. Go to https://freemyfeed.com
  2. Enter https://mail.google.com/mail/feed/atom as the input url, followed by your.user id and password. (Is it safe? Of course it is. But still, you should read the privacy policy on the website). Save the output URL.
  3. Log into Google SMS channels,
  4. Settings,
  5. Enter your mobile number and set the other options as per your preferences,
  6. Create a new channel,
  7. Enter the regular details in the form,
  8. In the ‘Source’ section, select RSS/Atom feed and enter the new feed generated from http://freemyfeed.com
  9. ‘Allow publishing by’: Only me
  10. ‘Who can subscribe’: By invitation only
  11. Click on Create Channel,
  12. And you’re done.

ZapTXT (USA and Canada only):

Register and enter the necessary details and the new feed generated from http://freemyfeed.com

Follow the easy step by step guide, and you’re done!

Filed Under: Technology Tagged With: free, google

About Raj Agrawal

A professional Mobile Software Engineer by profession, an M.C.A and M.C.P by qualification. A guitar hobbyist and an appreciator of Indian classical, folk, metal and baroque music.

Comments

  1. Dwayne says

    November 4, 2008 at 9:01 AM

    Out of curiosity, why do you have such an old phone for? Colour screen phones with bluetooth, email, gprs, mms, etc are cheap as now.

    Reply
  2. vishal says

    November 5, 2008 at 3:58 PM

    Hi
    This was really useful article. But it is risk to give user name and password to other sites even though they do not store it.

    Reply
  3. Raj says

    November 5, 2008 at 10:15 PM

    To Dwayne:
    Actually, i do own a better phone, Nokia N72. But, whenever im bored of using the “techy” phone, i switch back to 1110i and so on.

    To Vishal:
    It might be a risk. It’s up to the user to risk it up or prefer a paid service. You probably cant trust even the most credible sites of today. A good example is of Google, everybody is aware of their privacy policy.

    Reply

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