
There is nothing about Mailspring that is simple and easy.
I can determine the most urgent bugs and highest demand features, with an eye towards the actual development effort involved.Īll that to say, patience - yes, even years of it - is more than warranted. That’s why I was brought on as the Volunteer Community Manager. Software development is time-intensive at best, and Mailspring is a particularly complicated project. Over the last couple of years especially, the sheer mass of the issue list on GitHub - much of which consists of questions, minor edge-case bugs, duplicate issues, and wishlist feature requests - has made it difficult to find and focus efforts on the most urgent bugs and features, especially given limited development time. Historically, Mailspring has just one developer ( who works on this project in addition to a full-time job. (There’s even another feature slated for this year that has been more in-demand than the Calendar, so that has to come first!) That’s been the case for some time as you can imagine, the stability and usability of existing features is more important than adding new features.
Mailspring no longer contains or supports Coffeescript or CJSX!ĭownload: Mailspring 1.1.1 | Other Operating Systems | 87.I say “hopefully” because there are a lot of major bugfixes and stability upgrades that have to be done this year, and that may potentially push back the Calendar. Mailspring now creates a "Mailspring" folder instead of a "" folder because some providers do not allow the [ character. Undo/redo within the composer or any text field no longer trigger both text undo/redo and mail action undo/redo. The Less-is-More theme no longer contains small visual glitches with the new composer. Spellcheck now supports words with non-latin characters correctly. Switching to a different font size and back to "normal" no longer makes text a slightly different size than it was originally. In dark mode, text in the composer appears white instead of black. Performance of the new composer has been greatly improved by eliminating calls to draft.bodyduring editing. The small "X" on the quoted text control is back, allowing you to easily remove the quoted text block when replying. Mailspring now supports Secureserver (GoDaddy), Roundcube, 163.com, and several other providers that did not allow folder names to contain the [ character. Mailspring now supports indicators (unread badge) in Ubuntu Gnome Session (Ubuntu 17+) The new composer now supports additional Gmail shortcuts, which you can view from Preferences > Shortcuts, including Cmd-K (make link), Cmd-Shift-8 (make bulleted list), etc. If you create a Mailspring ID and later decide you don't want one, you can sign in to the Mailspring ID dashboard () at any time and permanently delete your account and all data associated with it. It syncs only the minimal amount of data required to power features like snooze, send later, etc., and uses a hashing mechanism to identify emails and associate it's metadata across installs. Mailspring does not store your email passwords in the cloud. Your Mailspring ID is separate from your email account(s) and you can use any email address or password you'd like. When you install Mailspring for the first time, you'll need to create a Mailspring ID.
Mailspring Pro costs $8/mo and helps support the development of Mailspring. However, if you use features like Snooze, Send Later, Send Reminders and Read Receipts often, you'll need to purchase a subscription to Mailspring Pro within the app. Mailspring is free for Mac, Windows, and Linux. It sports features such as an unified inbox, snoozing, reminders, templates, offline search, and support for Gmail labels. Mailspring supports all IMAP providers, including Gmail, Office 365 and iCloud. MailSpring is an open source email client application which support Windows, MacOSX and Linux.