Ask HN: What email client do you use?
Thunderbird users, are you looking forward to Mailpile or would you rather stick with a thick desktop client like Thunderbird?
Thunderbird users, are you looking forward to Mailpile or would you rather stick with a thick desktop client like Thunderbird?
[+] [-] OriginalAT|12 years ago|reply
I've just always felt that a desktop client just adds another layer where things can go wrong.
[+] [-] artificialidiot|12 years ago|reply
I use gmail, yahoo mail (through an extension), connect several pop3(I tell it to leave messages onn server), imap servers for work (for which emails are occasionally harvested and sold to spammers somehow..) and my own mail server (Hey, I am a web developer. No excuse to not have a el cheapo vps with webserver and an email servers combo), local maildir and mbox delivery for testing crap I write, several newsgroups and a shitloads of RSS/Atom feeds. It also has some xmpp integration of dubious usability. I also have Lightning extension which is supposed to behave as a calendar but I am a disorganised person and rarely check email by contemporary standard of every five minutes, whole day. Oh, and local spam detection.
Sure I look forward to Mailpile (just checked the marketing blurb) which promises to not show me ads and perform faster than "cloud" while offering all the features that should exist in practice to justify calling itself an email client. Competition is good and thunderbird is going senile by every passing day anyway.
I hope they won't spin off their custom web server as a standalone project too.
[+] [-] stevekemp|12 years ago|reply
From there I read it with lumail, if I have problems I revert to mutt.
I've got webmail setup for those times when I'm travelling and cannot use ssh.
[+] [-] lifeisstillgood|12 years ago|reply
I have used gmail to date simply because I must have a synched service between laptop and mobile. So gmail was just there as a IMAP/SMTP server for the iPhone mail reader
However as pg has pointed out, and the pretty good ActiveInbox implemented (hey ActiveInbox - apply for YC!) a mail inbox is really a task list.
And it must be linked to a contact book. All of which must be integrated at the event level.
So which mail client I use is less of the question than how do I solve
* capturing and synching contact details, contact events, email messages and tags across all these
I have a workable solution in gmail now, but I cannot capture events on my iPhone. Android appraently does so I will switch but its not all tied together neatly.
I have played with mutt and goobook but frankly I can see a good couple of weeks disappearing down this rathole. Yet it should be a solved problem. VCards, iCal, X-Headers, the solution is there. It just seems there is no RFC we can agree on
my rant on this subject: http://blog.mikadosoftware.com/2013/09/17/help-i-cannot-find...
Edit: am I just ill-informed (!) or has there really been no successful standardisation for "managing contact details events and tasks in a mailbox?"
[+] [-] wazari972|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] wikwocket|12 years ago|reply
Thunderbird was the first client I found that let me manage multiple separate accounts through the same interface, receiving and sending mail from each in a logical way. There's probably other ways to do that now, but I'm terrified of upsetting a system that Just Works.™
[+] [-] stevenrace|12 years ago|reply
Since it's within Emacs there's great GPG support, familiar keybindings, and less contextual shift than switching to a browser. It's also fully searchable, usable offline, and non-blocking to other emacs operations.
[1] http://www.djcbsoftware.nl/code/mu/mu4e.html
[+] [-] lefnire|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] sdfjkl|12 years ago|reply
Especially not Gmail, as every time I look at it, some other bullshit feature got added and the UI got more horrible.
[+] [-] auganov|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] marioluigi|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jameswyse|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] lnsignificant|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] mattbillenstein|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] qwerta|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|12 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] apricot13|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] aen|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] itaCas|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] webjames|12 years ago|reply
[+] [-] hiddentao|12 years ago|reply