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  • I use Thunderbird. I'm sure there might be other ones that are better, but it does the job.

  • don’t really have a favorite – started with Thunderbird a long time ago but switched over to webmail fairly early on

    now that I’ve started to build a new system, I started to look around at the various options (and maybe getting off webmail or at least having local storage “backup”) – the standard GUI clients (Thunderbird, Evolution, KMail, BlueMail, Mailspring) seem to be … fine – but none of them really stand out

    recently stumbled across some nice screenshots of aerc and the idea sounds really appealing, but I’ve never had any contact with terminal email programs and found out they’ve followed a completely different evolutionary path than GUI apps (even terminology has diverged between the two) – GUI apps keep trying to be an all-in-one (email, contacts, calendar, tasks, …) whereas terminal programs almost seem to to favor a “balkanization” of effort – aerc looks like it’s grabbed a middle-ground, you can run it as standalone or go all in with a fully customized setup – problem I’m running into is I can find lots of “how” guides, but very little in the “what” or “why” side of things …

  • mail(1) or nedmail(1) is all I really need.

    I prefer mutt/neomutt, but Thunderbird comes by default in basically every desktop-oriented distro I regularly interact with, so I end up using that most often on *nix. K-9 if I want it on my phone.

    My true love is the combination of acme(1) and faces(1), but that doesn't do encryption/PGP stuff.

  • Thunderbird’s not bad, but I usually use web stuff.

    I have an existing iCloud e-mail that I haven’t had the time to switch off of. I then use G-Mail for school stuff - since I’ve signed away my soul to Google anyway, might as well use what they have to offer.

    Maybe one day, I’ll start my own personal e-mail utopia, nut that day is not today.

  • I used to have lieer's gmi (read: mbsync with gmail tag syncing) paired with notmuch. It's good when it works, but it's annoying to need a service in the background.

    I used to use Gnus, but Gnus is sometimes weirds out if your tag filters are too complex for it

77 comments