Posted on January 11th, 2012 by Nicole Kobie
How to get email without a computer
Here in Vegas, CES is overflowing with computing embedded in devices of every kind — cars, home appliances, booth girls (I’m assuming, anyway) — but one stand is touting a way to cut the computer out of your life, while still receiving email.
The Presto Printing Mailbox is the antithesis of Martha Lane Fox’s digital divide plans: it’s for people who simply can’t understand — or can’t be bothered to understand — how to get email off that infernal computing box.
It’s essentially a cut-down printer, made by HP, with its own email address. Send an email to the Presto’s inbox, and it reformats the message, stripping out the header details and reflowing the text and images into a nice, easy-to-read style.
It can also be setup to print news headlines, a photo of the day, Sudoku puzzles, comic strips, a collection of Andy Rooney columns (I’m not making that up) and reminder messages — basically, it’s the internet printed out on paper for tech-baffled seniors (and to be clear, I don’t think most seniors actually feel this way — my own remaining grandparent certainly doesn’t).
The Presto doesn’t even require a broadband connection; it will pick up messages over dial-up on a standard phone line five times a day
The Presto doesn’t even require a broadband connection; it will pick up messages over dial-up on a standard phone line five times a day. Only approved senders’ messages will get through, so your parents won’t be found buried under a pile of paper spam.
There’s no scanner or other method of input, so the device is useless for sending a reply — which may be a good thing for some. The company’s spokesman noted his firm’s research suggested people who don’t get — or like — PCs prefer to reply by phone, so the Presto is set up to print contacts’ phone numbers at the top of the sheet.
The most intriguing use of the Presto is sending automated reminders, such as for appointments or to take medications. However, it’s hardly telemedicine: there’s no way of knowing — short of a phone call — if your ancient, tech-fearing great-grandmother got the message and popped her pills as told.
Simplicity isn’t cheap: the device is $99, and the Presto service costs $14.99 a month — it might be cheaper and easier to set up a fax machine, although the photos wouldn’t come out so nicely.
Arguably, it’s time to stop assuming older folks are incapable of learning new tricks; email isn’t the hardest skill to learn, and touchscreen smartphones and tablets are designed to be intuitive to use.
However, Presto’s apparently proving popular, with sales of tens of thousands globally over the past few years — while such a device isn’t necessary for readers of this website for obvious reasons, some people will doubtless find a use for it. Indeed, Presto is starting to be sold in Best Buy stores in the US, and is also available over Amazon.
Despite such popularity, it’s hard not to find the marketing a bit sad. The brochure quotes Sherri, from Chicago, who says: “My mother LOVES it! She is 84, and has never touched a computer and has no interest in learning. She says that getting her Presto mail is like someone coming to her house for a visit.”
Sherri: go visit your mother. And, while you’re there, set up a Gmail account for her.
Tags: CES, digital divide, Printers, seniors
Posted in: Random
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8 Responses to “ How to get email without a computer ”
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January 12th, 2012 at 7:45 am
wich it is available. in Sudan where computers are hard to buy
January 12th, 2012 at 7:58 am
This actually has a totally different use for businesses requiring printed information for somethings – it take time to sit there going through information that needs to be printed out – how much better if you turned up in the morning and it was all ready printed and ready to be used – it shortens the loop
January 12th, 2012 at 8:52 am
There are some people that are ‘proud’ of there non-tech abilities.
So i doesnt matter how many times you try and introduce them to computers and email, they still dont want to know.
January 12th, 2012 at 12:43 pm
My mother is not only not computer literate but profoundly deaf. The lack of a means of reply rules this interesting machine out of contention.
Luckily fax still works and with a fax machine at her end and efax converting both ways I can stay in contact – even from my phone.
The biggest benefit is that she doesn’t feel cut off as she is able to message out for help, or shopping
If this machine could scan and send like a fax it might be a better tool for the market. I feel the “they prefer to reply by phone” is a cop-out to cover this lack.
January 12th, 2012 at 1:07 pm
I think even the most die-hard Luddite will change their minds when return home to a foot-high pile of spam printed at 10p a page!
January 12th, 2012 at 9:14 pm
This isn’t exactly as cutting edge as it makes out. This technology is readily available in any hp printers that support eprint.
This gives you *@hpeprint.com to send your prints to.
My bargain priced HP Photosmart 5510 e-All-in-One Printer which cost just 40 quid all in has this feature by default.
Although it doesn’t use dialup, but then seriously who does? Especially at that price!
January 13th, 2012 at 6:27 pm
As I knew it mobile phones have internet access and email-thits fits the meaning of the title
January 26th, 2012 at 12:14 pm
This reminds me of all those hybrid old/new tech gadgets like Smith-Corona smart typewriters and the Amstrad Emailer – big, ugly, fiddly to maintain, expensive to run. Bought by children who feel bad about not seeing their aged parents often enough (guilty). Used for six weeks or so then sits in the corner gathering dust.