Mail causes me to procrastinate so much, and I have no idea why. I use icloud everything, so I wanted my mail there as well, but after 12-13 months I switched back to FastMail because their UX is subtly better suited to quickly sorting through mail for me. And fwiw I'm afaik not using any FastMail features that Mail doesn't have.
I don't mean this in the way that Client A > Client B, but I have spent a fair amount of thought on this, and I have not been aple to pinpoint exactly what characteristics makes the difference for me, which I find to be interesting in itself.
My goal is always to have an empty inbox. So, emails that require some sort of action from my part but are not urgent I will snooze them (Gmail feature) to a later time. Email that's like "ok thanks for letting me know" and that's the end of that interaction, I will delete. Other stuff that requires more immediate attention I'll let it hang in the inbox for at most a few days and then try to act on them.
I noticed that letting mails linger in sight in my inbox is energy draining or causes me to procrastinate.
Last week I searched for an email in Mail.app. It was right there on the screen and it couldn’t find it. It also fails to display or even list some attachments.
This is unacceptable to me. Yet I keep using it because I dislike Gmail’s web interface and my Vim imap setup is not really usable yet and probably never will be.
Outlook has the same searching issue. I often have to resort to manually eyeballing through my email archives to find what I'm looking for. Very annoying indeed.
I've used many, many different clients over the last few decades (yes, including Linux `mail`). I have to use Outlook at work, and I have to use my providers' web clients on my Windows gaming PC, but on all my other devices I use Mail.app.
I just... don't ever use all the features of the other clients, or don't like some of the behavior they have, or any of that. For a long time I would get excited about new email clients and try them out right away, but no more.
I dunno if it's just that I'm getting old, or if I just don't care as much, or both, or something else.
I use many features of Thunderbird. And it works fine with outlook, even including calendaring, with the Owl plugin. It is a paid plugin, but it makes life much better.
Indeed, I'm additionally using https://mimestream.com for company Gmail as the Gmail support in Mail.app is sometimes a bit lacking (Labels etc.), but it's also a good way to keep private and work emails separated.
I feel you. I now just use email in my web browser via the respective providers recommended website, aka mail.google.com, microsoft.office365.exchange.email or whatever it is they are calling it these days.
I just wish that Mail.app would have a seamless ingegration with Calendar.app like Microsoft already provides with Outlook. Also the label system feels very outdated compared to Outlook.
kriops|1 year ago
I don't mean this in the way that Client A > Client B, but I have spent a fair amount of thought on this, and I have not been aple to pinpoint exactly what characteristics makes the difference for me, which I find to be interesting in itself.
pandemic_region|1 year ago
I noticed that letting mails linger in sight in my inbox is energy draining or causes me to procrastinate.
tambourine_man|1 year ago
This is unacceptable to me. Yet I keep using it because I dislike Gmail’s web interface and my Vim imap setup is not really usable yet and probably never will be.
kiwijamo|1 year ago
bovermyer|1 year ago
I've used many, many different clients over the last few decades (yes, including Linux `mail`). I have to use Outlook at work, and I have to use my providers' web clients on my Windows gaming PC, but on all my other devices I use Mail.app.
I just... don't ever use all the features of the other clients, or don't like some of the behavior they have, or any of that. For a long time I would get excited about new email clients and try them out right away, but no more.
I dunno if it's just that I'm getting old, or if I just don't care as much, or both, or something else.
dotancohen|1 year ago
dewey|1 year ago
latchkey|1 year ago
markatkinson|1 year ago
marcomourao|1 year ago
https://freron.com/
siva7|1 year ago
krembo|1 year ago