Most important are messages from real people that you commonly interact with, then other messages (or notifications), then newsletters, then emails you’ve previously pinned (or starred in Gmail terminology) as important, and finally the rest of your inbox. This attempts to automatically prioritise your inbox into different categories. That brings me to one of Spark’s other clever features: the Smart Inbox. Similarly, you can schedule emails to be sent at a particular time, if you don’t want to disturb a colleague’s evening. Snoozes are synced across mobile and desktop, so if you snooze that work message on your phone, it will be there on your work laptop in the morning. This means if you get a work email at 9pm at night and don’t want to deal with it immediately, you can snooze it to the next morning, so that it effectively appears as a new message, rather than being forgotten about in the wastelands of your inbox. At the top of each email is a snooze button. It’s not unique to Spark, but it’s very well implemented here. That is brilliant, but I’ll come to the scary bit later…Įmail snooze button. Spark stores them all, which means when you go to install the app on your Android phone or an iPad, you simply have to enter the details of one account and all of your inboxes are automatically synced. Once you’ve set up all of your email accounts on one device, you’ll never need to enter all your passwords, server details etc again. There’s a feature that I love, while at the same time scaring the hell out of me (see What’s bad about Spark, below), which is cross-device account sync. The only problem I’ve had is a pop-up menu appearing when I go to shut the Mac down, claiming Spark is still syncing, but that normally disappears after a few seconds.Īccount sync across devices. It looks very clean, everything moves swiftly, it doesn’t swallow vast chunks of system memory. Mail is ready to read from almost the moment you fire it up – there’s almost no delay waiting for mailboxes to update. Outlook is a lumbering beast of a mail client Spark is a comparative gazelle. In my view, it’s better than both Apple Mail and Outlook. This week, I’ve been trying Spark – a cross-platform Mail client that works on Mac, iOS and Android. Last week, I had a successful flirtation with Apple Mail. For the past few weeks, I’ve been seeking out a replacement for Outlook on Mac.
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