This guide will teach you how to control unwanted emails and block specific senders on a iPhone. Spark’s Gatekeeper feature lets you decide who can email you by allowing you to accept or decline new senders. This results in wasted time deleting or blocking emails, but Spark can help. However, not all emails are useful or relevant, and many are unwanted newsletters or spam. But they really screwed the pooch, and annoyed their user base with their sloppy introduction.Email is heavily relied on for both personal and professional lives. Multiple accounts still work, and honestly, I have VIP email settings on Apple Mail on my phone set to trigger my watch, so I don’t really use notifications in Airmail anyways. I’m tempted to give in for the subscription - as an old user, the only thing I’m missing is the notifications. And the version for iOS 13 (I haven’t tried Catalina), hasn’t introduced anything to bring in up to speed.Īirmail: Not the prettiest, but it has support for every service, Spam-sieve, Unified inboxes and spam, Markdown composition… they just sucked horribly at introducing a rather inexpensive subscription service. It’s just ugly, and not as stable and streamlined, and I know they’re currently hard at work on their next version, and the current version isn’t getting much love.Īpple Mail: Still way behind everyone else, with search being their only strength. Unified spam box makes it easy to check spam.Ĭanary: Snoozing is generally consistent, it has a focused box, supports PGP encryption, unified inbox and spam box. Not to mention their snoozing feature is inconsistent, with stuff snoozing on desktop occasionally showing up early on iOS, etc. Spark: From what I understand their business model is reading everything. However, the desktop app lacks the ability to snooze, so you’re only able to triage/manage your email on the iPad/iPhone, and I like to do my mass triaging on my desktop. A unified spam mailbox also makes it easy to keep on top of misdirected email. Outlook: iOS outlook is stable, has a focus mode, and snoozes. MailPilot 3: Still in beta, and with no iOS companion, it means any messages snoozed that get returned actually don’t appear in your mobile inbox. As a bit of an email client conoseour, I’m always trying new apps, but I have issues with all of them, and have always come back to Airmail. But I’m like you, I’m resisting the subscription model - especially since I already paid for this app, with full functionality. The fact is, $10 a year for basically push notifications is nothing. Instead, we found out via app update notes? That’s insane, and stupid. AND they could have sent out an email, or posted on their blog, or twitter, explaining what they were going to do. They could easily have end of lined the current version and introduced a new version with subscription. I still feel the same way, annoyed as hell by the way they conducted it. Perhaps when the free year runs out, I’ll move my other sites to Google Fonts. But they took away the $50/year subscription a while back, replaced it with a free one year subscription, after which a subscription of some sort will be required (they don’t offer a subscription just for Fonts anymore) and I won’t piggybank off my employer’s subscription. I’m not sure what I’ll do next year when my free year’s worth of Adobe Fonts is up (I have two Adobe accounts- one paid for by my employer that covers Ps/Lr/Adobe Stock…and includes Fonts for free) and my personal account (Fonts, for my side websites). They know who their customers are - did we get any advance notification? Any justification for taking away what I’d already purchased? Heck no- we opened Airmail this morning to be greeted with a notice that my built-in features are now subscription-based.Īs for Adobe- I couldn’t agree more. While I don’t disagree - $10.00/year is not a lot of money and Airmail is probably worth it (I’ve used it and Outlook for several years on my iPhone), imo they went about it totally wrong.
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