misbrazerzkidai.blogg.se

Mimestream review
Mimestream review









mimestream review
  1. #Mimestream review archive#
  2. #Mimestream review full#
  3. #Mimestream review series#

If you appreciate articles like this one, support us by becoming a Six Colors subscriber. If you’re like me-a Gmail user who wants a real Mac app, and ideally one that’s a better fit to Gmail than Apple Mail-I strongly recommend that you try Mimestream. Jhaveri also says he’s planning an iOS version, and I’d be interested in that, too. I’m glad he’s someone who gets why people would use Gmail and want a Mac app dedicated to it-because I’m that person. Jhaveri says “Email is my passion,” and I wouldn’t stand in the way of anyone who feels passionately about something. The app is written in Swift and feels like a real, native Mac app. (Disclosure: SaneBox is a former sponsor.)

#Mimestream review series#

It also supports Gmail’s priority Inbox system, though I instead use a series of Gmail tags created by SaneBox. Gmail has some specific quirks-most notably the difference between archiving a message and deleting it-that Mimestream understands innately.

#Mimestream review archive#

Most importantly, it uses Gmail’s API ( not IMAP) to quickly display and archive mail, and to efficiently search my mail repository. (And yes, you can close off the message preview if you prefer to open messages in their own windows.) Mimestream will look familiar to anyone who has used Apple Mail-it’s got a multi-column design with mailboxes on the left, a message list in the center, and message content on the right. It looks nice and functions similarly to Gmail on the web. (You can sign up at the Mimestream website to request beta access.) Keeping in mind that Mimestream is in beta, it really is quite a polished app.

#Mimestream review full#

I’ve been using it for a couple of months and I full intent to pay for it when it emerges from beta testing. It’s a dedicated Gmail client app for the Mac that’s more app-like than Mailplane, while keeping the consistency and speed that Gmail offers over Apple Mail. Mimestream, developed from a former Apple engineer, looks very promising, but I'd like to know the pricing before jumping in (currently it's in free beta and pricing is still unknown). Instead, I found Mimestream, by former Apple Mail engineer Neil Jhaveri. It doesn’t work the way I want my email to work, and it’s inconsistent and slow in just too many ways. I tried to run Gmail in a single-site browser. My frustrations with Apple Mail had driven me to Gmail, and Mailplane was the perfect way to use Gmail on a Mac-in a separate app, with Mac keyboard shortcuts and drag-and-drop support and everything else, while still keeping the speed and efficience of the Gmail web interface. Unfortunately, back in June the makers of Mailplane announced that they were letting the app die due to Google banning embedded browsers from Gmail. The thought is that it combines Gmail options that you simply. I’ve been using Mailplane as my email client for something like a decade. For these unfamiliar, Mimestream is billed as a native macOS electronic mail consumer for Gmail. Mimestream is a Mac app reminiscent of Apple Mail, but it uses the Gmail API. Mimestream: A native Mac app with proper Gmail support











Mimestream review