Imagine the following scenario …
- You’re a stranger in a foreign land / airport;
- Your smartphone is out of juice or you don’t want to pay hefty data roaming fee;
- You cannot find a (free) WiFi hotspot for your laptop;
- And you need to answer some emails via Gmail.
Sounds familiar ? Now you can do that if you have a Kindle 2, as long as you can live with some constraints. As many of you already know, there is a very simple browser come with the Kindle 2, and there is a mobile version of Gmail with minimal graphics. Therefore, it makes sense to use that simple browser to access the simple web application. The constraints and preparation works are:
- It works only for countries / cities that support by Amazon Kindle 2’s WhisperNet (the flip side of this is you don’t need to pay expensive data roaming fee to check emails !!)
- The screen of Kindle 2 is relative small;
- The keyboard of Kindle is hard to type;
- There is no scroll up and down function (you need to use Next Page and Prev Page keys);
- You cannot read / write double byte / Unicode characters;
- You will not able to attach files.
- In the settings of the browser, turn on Advanced view mode and turn on Javascript
Still want to continue ? OK, let’s start, step-by-step :
- Turn on the wireless in your Kindle. Then go to “Home” / “Menu” / “Experimental”, and select “Basic Web”
- You will see the bookmark page, and “Menu” / “Enter URL”, and enter m.gmail.com
- You will see the basic login page and enter your Gmail account information.
- Somehow, Gmail will display the usual Gmail screen with all the mails which makes the screen very busy. I believe Gmail do this because they know that the request is not from a mobile device. Now, go to the URL bar on top, and enter m.gmail.com again !!
- Now you shall see the mobile Gmail email list page.
- Press “Next Page” key till you reach the last page, locate “Compose Mail” command …
- Enter the from address, to address, subject line and mail content. Add CC, or BCC if needed. Press “Send” and that’s it …
Don’t forget to “Sign out” (in the mobile Gmail page footer) before you turn off the Kindle !!
Enjoy …












{ 8 comments… read them below or add one }
I have a kindle international (I am staying in Australia). I tried registering the kindle with an Amazon account with a US address (with a non-US credit card registered and 1-click turned ON), but I still couldn’t access the internet except for Wikipedia. Australia is one of the countries that has access to Whispernet. Anybody manage to get web browsing to work in Australia?
Hi Lawrence,
You wrote “you tried registering”, so did you get it registered ? Also, in Kindle there are many bookmarked sites, have you tried others ? Let me know more details and would see how to make it work in down-under.
Cheers
Yes, I did register the kindle under a US-addressed account. I registered it via Kindle, rather than on computer (Amazon’s Manage My Kindle webpage) as I did not want to hide my Australian IP. No email was sent to ask me to verify my US address.
Of the many Kindle bookmarked sites, I am only able to access Wiki, and none other. BBC, CNN, and even Amazon do not work. I have also attempted https://www.gmail.com but to no avail.
I have heard that people from other countries, like Belgium and Japan, are able to have full web access. Not sure if they are using the latest Kindle firmware/software though. I have the latest firmware.
That’s kinda strange, I just use my International Kindle and browsed BBC, CNN, and Allrecipes, all worked. Just curious, have you try the 311 trick to switch to other Telco services provider and browse again ?
I used the 311 method and tried all three service providers. Optus does not seem to allow the Kindle to logon to the network at all. The other two, Vodafone and Telstra, only allow the Kindle to access Wikipedia and not other websites.
Too bad … Looks like you need to wait a while to have full support.
Still, enjoy your Kindle.
Anyway, don’t really need the slow Kindle internet access at home. Would be useful when travelling though.
True … using that occasionally to check email on the road is great (especially you don’t need to pay for the data charge) …