runbox7
wasup
runbox7 | wasup | |
---|---|---|
3 | 3 | |
124 | 40 | |
0.0% | - | |
8.9 | 0.0 | |
about 16 hours ago | almost 2 years ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
runbox7
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Ask HN: What email client do you prefer?
I've only ever worked at places with self hosted Exchange for e-mail and groupware. As a client, I use Outlook Web Access (OWA) most of the time and I think it's fine. It's simple, feels reasonably snappy to me and I like having the same interface on all the different machines I need to login from. Sometimes, I need to reach for the desktop version of Outlook in a Windows VM to access options or features not accessible in OWA (or in the sluggish abomination that is Outlook for Mac). However, in the end I don't care all that much about my e-mail client because I use a simple inbox-zero-ish approach to e-mail and only really need Inbox and Archive folders (as well as a delete function). This works with every client.
To have an offline archive, I also have Apple Mail connected to my Exchange accounts. I never use the app itself but frequently use Spotlight to search for and preview e-mails. However, if I'm already working in OWA, I use the search function in there. In my experience, it works well and doesn't feel significantly slower than searching locally in my offline archive.
[Sidenote: I find it annoying to have to use Spotlight for local e-mail search instead of Alfred.app (which has been my universal search app for many years). Alas, Apple only allows access to the e-mail folder on MacOS for their own apps for some annoying reason these days.]
Outside of work, I have the same setup with Apple Mail and Spotlight for archival and search. As clients, I use K-9 on Android and Apple Mail or runbox7 on the desktop. The latter is the webmail app of Runbox, my e-mail provider of choice (I think the app is pretty good - and open source on https://github.com/runbox/runbox7 ).
- Any good Google Calendar alternative?
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What is a good alternative to gmail?
I wouldn't call this the "best" option. "Best" is tied to a specific case, and OP's case isn't clear to me. I've self-hosted my mail for ~5 years, and I moved on to runbox.com now. Not expensive, cheaply hosted with green energy in Norway and their web UI is free software.
wasup
What are some alternatives?
iptvnator - :tv: Cross-platform IPTV player application with multiple features, such as support of m3u and m3u8 playlists, favorites, TV guide, TV archive/catchup and more.
box2d-wasm - Box2D physics engine compiled to WebAssembly. Supports TypeScript and ES modules.
generator-ngx-rocket - :rocket: Extensible Angular 14+ enterprise-grade project generator
friendly-pow - The PoW challenge library used by Friendly Captcha
Simple-Calendar - A simple calendar with events, tasks, customizable colors, widgets and no ads.
run-wasm - Run WASM based code executions in the browser easily
ownCloud - :cloud: ownCloud web server core (Files, DAV, etc.)
asdom - Use DOM APIs in AssemblyScript
builder - Drag and drop headless CMS for React, Vue, Svelte, Qwik, and more
web-assembly-rust-typescript-template - This repository was created to show how to link WebAssembly - Rust with TypeScript
FairEmail - Fully featured, open source, privacy friendly email app for Android
libauth - An ultra-lightweight, zero-dependency TypeScript library for Bitcoin Cash, Bitcoin, and Bitauth applications.