In my case I knew it would be sent, sometimes wi-fi goes down for a few seconds, that is to be understood. I don't turn off my wi-fi at home but there are "pregnant pauses" sometimes.
I am attempting to answer the original poster's question about forcing the e-mail to pend. Save as draft would be one option for this... But I can imagine that I would like to just hit send on the e-mail, and when I get somewhere that there is free wifi available, they would all just send on their own at that point.
From: Isabel Cutler <isabel95@gmail.com>
To: iPad@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, May 31, 2011 8:34 AM
Subject: Re: [iPad] Re: iPad & GMail
If you want to be aware of when it's sent you can also save a message as a draft in gmail.
Isabel
On Tue, May 31, 2011 at 8:25 AM, twenty pearls <akaivyleaf@yahoo.com> wrote:
I've done this by accident, more so than on purpose.There have been times when I've attempted to send an e-mail (in Yahoo but I don't think the provider is necessary to the point) and it hasn't gone through. I get some message that says, "unable to send, will send when possible". I've gone on and read other e-mail, then I notice the icon starts spinning at the bottom of the mail window and I get the swoosh sound that indicates the message was sent. I don't know how to recreate this on purpose, but there is the ability to send pending e-mail at a later time somewhere.
From: Nicole <gypsy1274@yahoo.com>
To: iPad@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, May 31, 2011 8:16 AM
Subject: Re: [iPad] Re: iPad & GMail
Perhaps no one answered because no one has tried what you are asking. Why don't you try it and let us know how it works? You will need to set up your gmail account to be received on the iPad. Once the mail is downloaded, you can turn the wifi off. As for being able to answer the emails and then turn wifi back on to send those answers, please try it and let us know. I would imagine that the iPad will save your messages in your sent box and deliver them as soon as a signal is received, but I really don't know.
Thank You,NicoleSo-called "global warming" is just a secret ploy by wacko tree-huggers to
make America energy independent, clean our air and water, improve the fuel
efficiency of our vehicles, kick-start 21st-century industries, and make our
cities safer and more livable. Don't let them get away with it!
From: Ian Gillis <tessel.bas@gmail.com>
To: iPad@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tue, May 31, 2011 3:39:31 AM
Subject: [iPad] Re: iPad & GMail
Maybe it was a dumb question, but an answer would have been
reassuring. Fortunately I checked into our hotel in Rome and found
that the wifi cost was 5€ for three hours so I used the Gmail app and
used online time answering mails. However it would be nice to know if
I could use the iPad Mail app offline without downloading a GB or so
of archived mail via the IMAP interface.
Can anyone advise me?
regards,
Ian G
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/LVeF/
On 22 May 2011 16:49, Ian Gillis <tessel.bas@gmail.com> wrote:
> I use GMail to aggregate all my mail into one place; I like it for the
> webmail attributes of not taking up storage on my Mac, notebook,
> laptop and iPad (1, less 3G) and being accessible from each of those
> devices, and the big plus of having a relational database approach
> with its "label" function. I've never used the Apple Mail facility on
> any device.
> However I've got a stay booked in an hotel that has a 5€ per hour wifi
> charge that I would like to minimise by downloading mail to my iPad,
> composing offline and going online to send.
> If I fire up the iPad Mail app can I do this without downloading
> archived mail and leaving all mail sent or received on the server for
> further work at home on the desktop?
> regards,
> Ian
--
http://www.pbase.com/isabel95
http://www.flickr.com/photos/isabel95/
"A problem is only the pessimistic way of looking at a challenge"
__._,_.___
.
__,_._,___