1/2/2023 0 Comments Canary mail snooze![]() ![]() ![]() I tried Outlook and had hopes for it but that didn’t work well for me either. I would love to see more innovation from Apple on Mail but it handles Exchange really well (better than Airmail, Canary or Spark) and is reliable. If an email program fails at basic functions, it doesn’t matter if they can snooze or send emails later. Plus some email programs just bite the dust suddenly. Spark can’t change fonts or parse some emails properly (Airmail also messes up many received emails with regard to parsing). Readdle never fixed that despite many back and forth emails with logs and other details. And Spark wouldn’t display Exchange invites as invites if the invitation contained attachments, as they often can and do. Yeah, I miss snoozing messages but Mail has never lost an email I was sending or drafting. Spark is missing some basic features like rules and the ability to turn off threading or sort a thread in descending order and has been saying for two years now that these are under consideration yet never delivers. ![]() Airmail is buggy and has terrible support and the worst interface I’ve ever seen. Snooze only works in the Inbox, so if you have an email elsewhere that you want to snooze, either move it to the Inbox in Outlook Online or mark it for Follow Up in the Outlook client instead.Was a devoted user of airmail and spark and ultimately both fell short, miserably, and I’ve been quite happy with Mail. You can find the Snooze option on Outlook Online’s toolbar above the Inbox. If you’re used to Gmail’s Snooze, the good news is that Outlook’s version works in pretty much the same way, except it uses folders rather than labels. ![]() It allows you to delay your email by minutes, hours, and even days in line with your availability. Obviously, Microsoft thought so, too, because the company has added its own version of Snooze to Outlook Online. Snooze for Your Email Client Snooze is a Mailbutler feature that allows you to temporarily hide emails from your inbox that you want to answer at a later time. You select an email, choose a snooze time, and it disappears out of your inbox, only to reappear as if by magic at the required time. Gmail’s Snooze option was one of those new functions that was so obvious in hindsight that you wonder why no one did it sooner. Use it to move items out of your inbox until you’re ready to deal with them and stop your inbox from filling up with emails you don’t need right now. Outlook Online has a Snooze function, just like Gmail. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |