Regardless of how easy an email client is to use, of how pretty it is, and even of its cost, what it can actually do is its most fundamental requirement. SnapperMail can do a lot. It downloads from any POP account, and can work with multiple accounts - a feature that most clients have but a few important ones (like TreoMail) don't.
You can set up your email downloads to fetch any amount of data, from only the headers to every little thing in the email (including attachments, discussed below) - no matter how long it is. You can also set it only to get the most recent emails, also. You can automatically bcc an email address with every send (important for me, I'm not entirely wireless!).
SnapperMail also has robust deleting options, allowing you to delete email on just on your handheld ("Trash"), just on the server ("Delete from Server"), or both automatically ("Junk").
Whenever you set Snapper to perform an action on a message (i.e. delete, download entire message, etc.), you see the message's icon chage. You can remove the instructions as well.
Also, SnapperMail supports SMTP Authorization and POP-before-send. Alas, it does not yet support SSL SMTP authentication, but I've found very few do. It is on the list of features to hopefully implement, however. Unfortunately, SnapperMail doesn't yet support making your own folders, but once it's out of Beta and you purchase it, it will.
In the message view, you can set it to show some, a few, or all of the message headers. When you tap "reply" a dialog pops up offering "Reply," "Reply All," and "Forward." When you are sending, you can either choose "Send" to send it immediately or "outbox" to send it on your next send/fetch. During the send/fetch, there is a great information screen that not only shows you an accurate sdFASdf box, but let's you skip individual messages as you see their subject lines.
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