snappymail
Mailspring
snappymail | Mailspring | |
---|---|---|
8 | 68 | |
869 | 15,090 | |
- | 0.4% | |
9.1 | 7.9 | |
6 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
PHP | C | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
snappymail
- Opinions on setting up email that integrates well with nextcloud?
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What's a good looking (and functional) webmail application?
I’ve been using snappymail for a while without many issues: https://github.com/the-djmaze/snappymail
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Modern options for mail clients that aren't well known?
I've been self hosting SnappyMail for the last few months after giving up on gmail. It's not perfect, but it's been pretty good... if I ever get any free time, I will probably try to start contributing to the project.
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best selfhosted webmail?
You might check out SnappyMail which is a fork that had this vulnerability fixed in days vs almost a year for Rainloop.
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Recommendation of webmail
just saw this hard fork looking through the rainloop github: https://github.com/the-djmaze/snappymail
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Any good selfhosted email client?
Don't use Rainloop. There's a major bug that still hasn't been patched. Try the SnappyMail fork instead.
- Looking for a good Linux or Docker installed web-based multi-IMAP client.
- All self-hosted email client options are ugly!
Mailspring
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What Is Wrong with Enterprise Linux
I fully agree, moreover this:
> Rolling release distributions like OpenSUSE Tumbleweed follow upstream much more closely while still maintaining stability through thorough automated testing
Shows the author hasn't used Tumbleweed for any reasonable amount of time himself[0][1][2]. I daily drove it for a short while before moving to Fedora.
0: https://github.com/Foundry376/Mailspring/issues/533
1: https://forums.opensuse.org/t/tumbleweed-breaks-after-update...
2: https://www.reddit.com/r/openSUSE/comments/v09hnc/tumbleweed...
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MailSpring Compatibility?
/u/protonmail is the a reason why there's been no effort on this front? It appears that it comes down to some sort of handshake issue but I can't imagine this is that hard to fix.
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JMAP – a much needed modern email open standard
I was hopeful that https://www.nylas.com/ would be the de-facto "adapter" placing a common API surface on top of the major providers and dragging them into a modern-API world. They even had an email client of their own as a proof of concept (forked by one of the original authors as https://github.com/Foundry376/Mailspring - and its reusable core https://github.com/Foundry376/Mailspring-Sync may be interesting to many here). But they've pivoted towards making their API only available behind B2B contracts and opaque pricing, and primarily used for corporate email monitoring and CRM use cases - perhaps because security and privacy considerations are nontrivial. I'm still rooting for them but it's a shadow of what it could have been.
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Mail client
Mailspring
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Recommendation of Windows software [A long read]
Mailspring- A great email client for windows (Opensource + Freemium)
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The Future of Thunderbird: Why We’re Rebuilding from the Ground Up
I love Mailspring, it's modern and open source: https://getmailspring.com/
The UI uses Electron, but the actual sync engine is in C++, so it's pretty fast.
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Translate text inside Apple Mail
The only app I’m aware of which translates emails is this; https://getmailspring.com
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linux: choosing a well-supported and future proof email desktop client?
Mailspring is quite nice. It also has a paid version and is actively updated so I think it's likely to stick around for awhile.
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Cross Platform Email Client
Mailspring, which is open source, is currently my recommendation for a desktop email client.
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Which email client do you prefer and why?
Mailspring. Open-source and fully local, but an optional account and optional subscription for premium cloud-based features. Thunderbird was too cluttered and Geary, although I really wanted to like it, was just too minimal.
What are some alternatives?
Roundcube - The Roundcube Webmail suite
Mailspring-Libre - (archived) Mailspring Libre build – aiming at removing Mailspring's dependecy on a central server
RainLoop - Simple, modern & fast web-based email client
Mailpile - A free & open modern, fast email client with user-friendly encryption and privacy features
SOGo - SOGo is a very fast and scalable modern collaboration suite (groupware). It offers calendaring, address book management, and a full-featured Webmail client along with resource sharing and permission handling. It also makes use of documented standards (IMAP, CalDAV, CardDAV, etc.) and thereby provides native connectivity (without plugins) to many clients such as Microsoft Outlook, Apple iCal, the iPhone, Mozilla Lightning, and a plethora of mobile devices.
intellij-plugins - Open-source plugins included in the distribution of IntelliJ IDEA Ultimate and other IDEs based on the IntelliJ Platform
nextcloud-roundcube - NextCloud app to integrate RoundCube Webmail
FairEmail - Fully featured, open source, privacy friendly email app for Android
electron-overlay-window - Creating overlays is easy like never before
ProtonMail Web Client - Monorepo hosting the proton web clients
sigma-file-manager - "Sigma File Manager" is a free, open-source, quickly evolving, modern file manager (explorer / browser) app for Windows and Linux.