

- #Airmail for mac shutting down update#
- #Airmail for mac shutting down full#
- #Airmail for mac shutting down pro#
#Airmail for mac shutting down update#
They did release a big update to the iOS version but bugs still there. I have submitted bug reports on this twice via email and live support, but they haven't done anything. But it's been a big disappointment due to things like truncating long messages, or crashing on loading rich content or long emails. I bought the iOS version for my iPhone on day 1, on the strength of the Mac version. I'm willing to persist as the iOS versions show real promise, but they need to pick up on killing existing bugs rather than rush out new features. You can trash an email and it disappears, then immediately reappears in your current inbox. Other actions can have similar inconsistent results. Actions are inconsistent sometimes the default action is to mark an email as "unread" when it is already marked that way. Some emails that are rich in content simply cause it to inelegantly crash.
#Airmail for mac shutting down full#
The OS X (or is it macOS) version is great very stable, and it's keyboard features and integration are standout features.īut, its iOS versions, particularly the iPAD version, are full of infuriating bugs.
#Airmail for mac shutting down pro#
I frequently have to bring up Bus圜al on my MacBook Pro when switching modes in Outlook gets too cumbersome. Good luck keeping an eye on your calendar while you move around in a conversation. I can have Excel or Word spread across two monitors, but aside from popping out individual emails for reading or composing, it remains a single-window monolith. It makes me wonder now why Outlook has never been given the full multi-window treatment. This works especially well when I have more than a single screen available. If the applications are separate, I can put them side by side and get a much clearer view. Sure, you can usually get a mini-calendar to one side, but then you have to click through day-by-day. In an integrated client, I have to flip back and forth between tabs to really check those dates. This sounds strange, but I often find myself reading an e-mail that has a list of dates and times for a possible event. The first thing is that it should not be integrated with its own calendar or to-do list. I can't recommend Airmail with this flaw. Any other client I've tested handles this use case by displaying a paperclip though. The development team indicates this behavior is by design and refuses to fix it. This is a critical flaw that results in miscommunication. The end result is that blank or partial emails are received without the end user realizing that an attached photo was included by the sender. Airmail has a design flaw that treats most attached photos that are typical MIME attachments as inline content which the client then fails to present with a paperclip. RFC complient clients indicate an attachment was included (generally using a paperclip icon) which allows the end user to download the attachment if desired. Too often, I receive emails that include a photo attachment that Airmail mishandled. I have the airmail client set to not automatically download attachments by default for security and privacy reasons. The problem that I have with airmail is its mishandling of attachments.
