I’m tried of how terrible Gmail is. Id like an email client with folders or categories. If it can sort them automatically (like how Googles now defunct inbox app used to) that would be even better.

Edit: in a couple days or whenever the activity on this post slows down. I will update this post with a list of the most recommended email app.

Edit2:

Results are in: Number is the amount of people who specifically mentioned it.

  1. FairMail 6
  2. K-9 5
  3. Spark 2
  4. ProtonMail
  5. Re:work
  6. Nine
  7. Tutanota
  8. Canary Mail
  9. Aqua
  • Morethanevil
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    512 years ago

    K-9 Mail is my favorite. It will.be renamed in future to Thunderbird, because the developer is now working for them 😊

  • southsamurai
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    342 years ago

    Fairemail is pretty much the default android client. Open source, full featured, not bad on the eyes. It just fucking works without hassles.

    If anything, the settings are too feature packed, it can take a while to tweak everything if you really want it customized

    • gingerwolfie
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      22 years ago

      Thanks for the recommendation. I’m tired of the official app and will try this out instead!

  • chi-chan~
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    272 years ago

    FairMail is very good, and gets updates frequently.

    Works great with Gmail, and other mail services.

    • @corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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      -42 years ago

      These are the guys who pluralize one of ‘traffic’, ‘help’ or ‘email’ with an S like it’s not stupid?

  • @AngryDemonoid@lemmy.lylapol.com
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    162 years ago

    Another vote for FairMail. I’ve been using it for a few years at this point and never had a reason to look for an alternative.

    I’ll probably give K-9 a try when it eventually rebrands as Thunderbird though.

      • ElPussyKangaroo
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        32 years ago

        I like the Smart 1.0 implementation.

        2.0 just hides away a lot of important messages. I have 5 email IDs due to work and other stuff, and I CANNOT figure out how that interface works.

        The 1.0 works perfectly.

        • @Drun@lemmy.world
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          22 years ago

          I’m absolutely agree. I really tried to get used to the new interface, but its a pain.

          Also, the new Windows version lacks support of Exchange, and it messes up your accounts on another devices.

          Still love it. Not the windows version.

          • ElPussyKangaroo
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            12 years ago

            I prefer the original Mail and Calendar app that came with Windows 10.

            But Microsoft being Microsoft, abandoned their own app dev platform to essentially just make a web app instead. Apparently, native apps are just too much to ask for these days. 🙄

  • @chepox@sopuli.xyz
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    112 years ago

    Nine

    Been using for a long time because of the rich text email options. But it is awesome all around. My pick for best of the best.

  • @ExtremeDullard@lemmy.sdf.org
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    11
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    2 years ago
    • On Android: K9Mail. By far the best.
    • On Linux: ThunderBird. It’s bloated like an obese whale on cortisone but I’ve yet to see a better client.
      • @Futurama@lemmy.world
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        42 years ago

        Agreed. FairEmail is my goto choice. They’re both open source and on F-Droid.

        FairEmail does have a $9 license you can buy to add extra features, but even without the license, I found it to be a nicer app than K9.

  • flauschke
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    52 years ago

    k9 which will be become thunderbird mobile in the future

  • pgetsos
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    52 years ago

    K9. Super happy in general, apart from push email not working properly most of the time

  • Chrissie
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    52 years ago

    Thunderbird - a bit slouchy at times but featurewise I’m very happy with it :)

  • dantheclamman
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    52 years ago

    I used K9 for years but recently switched to FairEmail. Works better in terms of auto-completing addresses, has better sever-side search. Previously it looked horrible compared to K9 but lately it has added Material You and other attractive theming options. It has a rather intimidating level of options but is very powerful. That being said, I still like K9 and will probably continue to check in as they add features and become part of Thunderbird. Both K9 and FairEmail are really good in terms of being ad-free, privacy-respecting clients with unified inboxes, dark mode and other features most important to me. K9 has advantage of being totally free where FairEmail puts some key features behind a purchase, which I understand, as it’s a solo developer.

  • @yourdogsnipples@lemmy.world
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    4
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    2 years ago

    “Id like an email client with folders or categories.”

    I tried a few other email clients to see if I could ditch the gmail one (years ago, admittedly), and where those clients fell short for me was they didn’t support labels, only folders. Multiple labels can apply to one email, but an email can only belong in one folder.

    Does anyone know if things have changed, whether third party clients now support gmail labels?

    • @Creat@discuss.tchncs.de
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      12 years ago

      There are email clients that do support labels (like em mail client), but I haven’t found one where that actually syncs with the server. As far as I can tell, IMAP does support labels, but maybe the label concept isn’t the same so it doesn’t translate? Maybe it works over exchange as a protocol, but I haven’t tried.

      Basically, I think it’s a limitation is the (by now) rather old protocol that’s still being used, and the lack of (well supported) alternatives?

      Note that em client sports Gmail’s labels just fine, and syncs them properly, but that part only works with Gmail. Which kind of defeats the purpose of trying to ditch Gmail, but wanting labels and not folders.