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Kiwi vs mailplane
Kiwi vs mailplane












kiwi vs mailplane
  1. #KIWI VS MAILPLANE INSTALL#
  2. #KIWI VS MAILPLANE ARCHIVE#
  3. #KIWI VS MAILPLANE FULL#
  4. #KIWI VS MAILPLANE SOFTWARE#
  5. #KIWI VS MAILPLANE MAC#

👉Proper add-ins, not just javascript hacks. Remember how cool labs were when you first saw it? Then you realized that it’s really a place for someone’s lunch project until they get bored of it. 👉Reducing the mind-numbingly confusing settings/options. Given that, I’d love it if they shaved off some time developer to improve it by: However, it still looks and behaves pretty much like it did on day one. Gmail is a giant hack on top of IMAP, so as a result you really need to use Gmail proper to get the biggest benefit. They really need actual native apps on all platforms, not just the re-skinned web apps they have. If there was something you could change or redesign in Gmail, what would it be? I’m a life long vi/vim user and if I could find a reliable set of keyboard bindings for Gmail I’d be in heaven.

#KIWI VS MAILPLANE MAC#

I haven’t given Outlook on the Mac a go yet since I’m not sure it will play well with Gmail, but maybe sometime soon.Īlso, as long as I have a keyboard under my fingers, I’m a keyboard command and shortcut monster. You never know where things end up and even when you try to train it, 6/10 times it doesn’t stick. Gmail tabs are an abomination of email sorting. I’ve been trying to replicate its feature of sorting your inbox in Focused/Other on my desktop but haven’t been able to. On mobile, where a lot of reading is done, everything runs through Outlook.

kiwi vs mailplane

Things just work better and I don’t want to keep fiddling with little things breaking here and there. I’ve tried several of the native app solutions for Gmail ( Kiwi, Boxy, Mailplane) and even Gmail in its own Unite window, but always come back to just using Chrome. Time will tell if it has staying power in terms of support and features. It’s pretty cool and works pretty well so far. Though I am trying out a new one, Flash by HelpNinja, that’s supposed to make Gmail like Superhuman (more on that later). They’re all…fine… but all feel like javascript hacks. I should be able to see the contact card and the last few messages I’ve exchanged with a person when I’m emailing with them.Īs for Gmail, I use a variety of add-ins: Copper (for our CRM), Asana (Tasks), Grammarly (for grammar) and a few other minor ones. Interestingly enough, there’s almost no great integration with your contacts, plugins or native, which is something, I don’t know, that could be valuable when you’re emailing those very people.

#KIWI VS MAILPLANE INSTALL#

◼️If you really want to freak people out, install QuoteFix It’s been a while, so maybe time to give them another look. ◼️ MailButler used to be a great plugin, but then they went all enterprise-y and subscription-based, but couldn’t quite pull off the transition. ◼️ LetterOpener means you can open the pesky winmail.dat files that pop up

#KIWI VS MAILPLANE SOFTWARE#

◼️ SpamSieve by C-Command Software brings Gmail levels of spam filtering to your desktop ◼️The suite from SmallCubed (MailTags and Mail Act-On especially) are great Apple has slowly been killing those off AND making the app unstable and worse, which is just an amazing feat. It used to have a ton of cool add-ons and tweaks you could make to it.

#KIWI VS MAILPLANE FULL#

It’s just easier to type things out with a full keyboard.

kiwi vs mailplane

I do most of my writing and responding on the desktop.

#KIWI VS MAILPLANE ARCHIVE#

So as a result, I read, process and archive very independently between personal and work. However, it’s actually nice not having everything all lumped into one inbox. I used to have them both in Mail.app, but Gmail doesn’t work that well in Mail.app. On my desktop, I use two email clients: Gmail in Chrome for my work email and Mail.app for my personal email. I can definitely admit that it’s a wheel spinning time suck and I’m vastly more efficient when I have a limited amount of time to run through it then when I pop in and out 5-10 mins at a time. I also check my email way too often during the day and have been really trying to check it at scheduled intervals. I get anxiety when I see people’s inboxes with thousands or tens of thousands of messages in them. That said, I keep things under a 100 total. Everything is either in my inbox or archived. Then search started to be really good and I gave up trying to file them. I used to meticulously file my emails away according to various geeky dimensions, but I gave up after I lost all my work one time. I just try and keep things mildly out of control instead of totally out of control. It used to be so easy (h/t The Streets) to achieve before I had kids.














Kiwi vs mailplane