I use Thunderbird on desktop and K9 on mobile.
I can’t say I love either but I’ve tried a bunch of options and they were the best for me. Plus development has picked up on both recently so I hope they get polished up.
IIRC, the primary (and maybe only?) dev for k-9 mail on Android was hired by the Thunderbird team, and eventually, k-9 will get rebranded as a mobile version of Thunderbird (presumably with eventual setting sync capabilities and feature parity and such).
Yes, that is a large part of what I meant by “development has picked up”. IIUC there are now multiple full-time devs on K9 (which I guess will be called Thunderbird Mobile or something eventually)
Generally I use Thunderbird since it’s cross platform and consistent, though recently I’ve been trying out Geary and it’s not bad, but definitely is a bit too basic for me. For example, it’s not super obvious how to mark all messages in a folder as read - and when doing so in another client, I was stuck with an inconsistent unread counter.
So I’ll probably just end up on good ole Thunderbird again.
On Android I just use the Gmail app, but I’ll be looking to see how the new Thunderbird/K-9 update goes.
Good o’ thunderbird
This one :)
Thunderbird on PC and K-9 Mail on Android
Thunderbird on the desktop. k-9 mail on mobile.
Tutanota. It’s free and encrypted.
And I just use a text document to compose the email.
Fairmail on android, Thunderbird on desktop
Same. Fairemail is great.
This
Same here. I am eager to test the new Thunderbird/K-9 update, but I believe I will stick with Thunderbird and FairEmail. Just because they are both exactly what I need.
@nour I use Gnome’s Evolution. It was installed by default and its never given me any problems so I haven’t had a reason to switch to anything else.
K-9 mail and emacs mu4e
Thunderbird on desktop / laptop. Proton + Gmail app on android
Apple Mail. I’d use Thunderbird if it used native frameworks for the UI; sadly this keeps me from using a lot of open-source stuff. I’m too picky
I think claws on linux is fantastic. It’s not packed with features, but it has everything I need and is very straightforward to configure and use once you’ve got your accounts connected. My work uses office365 for our emails which gave me a lot of trouble setting up, but I found a FOSS program called davmail which allows those accounts to be compatible with all email clients.
Betterbird
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