Yahoo to discontinue support for Mail, Contacts on older Apple devices

Posted:
in iPhone edited June 2015
Support for Yahoo Mail and Yahoo Contacts will be discontinued for some older Apple devices as of June 15, Yahoo said in a Thursday blog post.




In the case of Yahoo Mail, people with devices running iOS 4 or earlier will no longer be able to use their Yahoo accounts with iOS' native Mail app. At the same time, Yahoo Contacts will stop syncing with Macs on OS X Lion or earlier.

The changes are needed to ensure the speed, security, and functionality of Yahoo services, the company explained. People with unsupported operating systems will still be able to reach Mail and Contacts on the Web via mail.yahoo.com.

Yahoo also said it is planning to shut down a number of other properties entirely, most notably maps.yahoo.com, which is closing at the end of June. Maps will continue to be a part of Yahoo offerings, but only in relation to services like Flickr and search.

Also shuttering by the end of the month is Yahoo TV in France, Germany, Spain, Italy, Canada, and the UK, along with Yahoo Autos in those same countries except for Canada. By mid-month Yahoo Movies will disappear in Spain, and much of Yahoo Philippines will be gone, redirecting Web visitors to Yahoo Singapore. Even Singapore will lose Yahoo Entertainment come early July.

Pipes, the company's Web aggregation tool, will no longer allow new Pipe creation after August 30. The service will come to an end a month later in order to let developers migrate any essential data.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 10
    magman1979magman1979 Posts: 1,293member

    The discontinuation of service on iOS 4 or older I think is reasonable, but OS X Lion? I still know lots of researchers using it, and unfortunately they cling to that service, and won't be happy at this.

  • Reply 2 of 10
    djames4242djames4242 Posts: 651member

    I imagine if you're willing to pay for Yahoo Mail, you could set up access via POP (assuming you still need a paid account for that). I don't use free webmail services, but I have hotmail set up for my child and he's using my iPhone 3G which is stuck on 4.2.1. Wonder if Microsoft will kill support for older devices too soon.

  • Reply 3 of 10

    In what way did Yahoo ever support email on Macs?  I've never used anything but the web interface to check my yahoo mail.  Is that going away?  And I'm an OS 10.6 user, with no desire to upgrade.  If yahoo demands it, they'll find themselves dropped.

  • Reply 4 of 10
    this is good news. it will force users to upgrade their ancient iOS devices. OS X Mavericks is the future and it's time for people to upgrade; it's free so it shouldn't be too big of a deal. I'd be happier if they charged for the Mavericks upgrade because they put a lot of work into the update and you're getting a lot more utility but I'm hoping this is just a play to slow people's macs and get them to buy new hardware.
  • Reply 5 of 10
    Those are the lucky folks as yahoo is constantly hacked, almost every email from yahoo accounts to me is someone's email that's been compromised
  • Reply 6 of 10
    numba1numba1 Posts: 23member

    Is the service going away for older operating systems or older devices?  I have a late 2009 iMac, but it runs the current operating system fine.

  • Reply 7 of 10
    lostkiwilostkiwi Posts: 639member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by TeaEarleGreyHot View Post

     

    In what way did Yahoo ever support email on Macs?  I've never used anything but the web interface to check my yahoo mail.  Is that going away?  And I'm an OS 10.6 user, with no desire to upgrade.  If yahoo demands it, they'll find themselves dropped.




    Pretty sure they mean if you access Yahoo mail through the Mail app on your Mac.

    I have used it for years and it works well enough.

  • Reply 8 of 10
    linkmanlinkman Posts: 1,035member
    Will this totally lock out the iOS4 Mail app or are they just dropping full support for it? i.e.: it'll still work until something else changes. It's been a long time since I dealt with iOS4 but couldn't you just configure it to connect using SMTP, IMAP, and/or POP3?
  • Reply 9 of 10
    vmarksvmarks Posts: 762editor
    Yahoo was the first partner for email on iOS, specifically because Yahoo went to the trouble to do Push properly, rather than wait for the email client to poll the server.

    Because Push isn't a standard part of SMTP/IMAP/POP Yahoo can do this. I'm not certain about what changes there are to Push between the different iOS versions, but perhaps there are some.
  • Reply 10 of 10

    didn't heard about Yahoo for a long time, i wonder this company still living :)

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