Like Gary, I have quite a few accounts on it, and it works great. However, downloading malware is not a danger for Mac users, since there is no auto-launching, and (unlike with Windows) applications can’t be sent as single files. I also have a “real” job working for a giant company (20+ thousand employees) -most of whom use Windows 10 / Microsoft Office. #Alternative spamsieve windows windows 10 As a result, for that side, I use Microsoft Outlook (installed by my employer). I could keep all of my email in Outlook, too, but I’d rather have it separate. It works beautifully, it incorporates a calendar and address book seamlessly, and the search is great too. They also have an iOS version that is every bit as polished as the desktop version. I don’t know if it can be purchased separately, but as Microsoft offers Office 365 for up to six people for under $100/year, we have that for my wife and kids. Half are on Macs, half use Windows - Microsoft doesn’t care how many devices or what types of devices the software is installed on. Their only limit is the number of people that use it. Thanks - it’s a neat app but possibly a little lightweight for my needs. Yes, I know where you’re coming from on this one. Spark has some really great features but it’s also lacking in some really obvious ones too. The two biggest missing features from spark for me are I have workarounds for the things I found it lacks, and while on the face of it my workarounds ,right seem OTT, they slot in well with how I do things in general. My solution is as follows, but first I should explain my setup. On my main machine I have Spark with all my email accounts. On a 2nd machine, I run Apple mail, also with all my mail accounts added. On the 2nd machine Mail is setup to move s copy of everything to a local folder, this is in effect my local archive/backup of all the mail I get. As well as archiving all mail this machine also runs all the rules I have in place, plus it has various spam filters setup. The idea is the 2nd machine (with Apple Mail) sorts all my incoming mail, removing spam, sorting into folders, and archiving. This means that by the time the mail hits the main machine (and all my devices) all the hard work is done (by Mail), so Spark just has to handle the basics. In this setup Spark is in effect purely the front end, with Mail on the 2nd machine doing all the grunt work. I realise this sounds completely overkill, but I’ve always had my email setup over two machines for archiving purposes, so it was only a bit more to add in the spam and filtering stuff.ĭoing it this way means almost nothing get’s to me via the main machine or devices that I don’t actually want.ĭepending on how you do things Geoff, if you like the features that Spark has, something similar might work for you to overcome it’s short-comings. I guess I should add that the main reason for going with Spark was because as said (and it was he who put me onto it) 2Do and Spark integrate really well. So I’ve stuck with it, despite it’s failings. #Alternative spamsieve windows windows 10.PowerMail only supports SpamSieve with POP accounts. PowerMail 4.0 and later (6.x recommended) from CTM Development.Postbox Express and the (discontinued) Mac App Store version of Postbox are not compatible. Postbox 6 and 7 are not currently compatible. Postbox 2.0 through 5.x from Postbox, Inc.Outlook Live and other browser-based mail are not supported, except via the Mac clients listed here. Outlook needs to be running with “New Outlook” turned off, which it does not allow when running in free mode. Outlook from Microsoft Office 2011 (14.x) and later, including Outlook 15.x and 16.x from Office 365.(By applying a workaround you can use SpamSieve with Mailsmith 2.1.5.) Mailsmith 2.3.1 and later from Stickshift Software.MailMate 1.1.2 and later from Freron Software.GyazMail 1.2.0 (1.5.8 or later recommended).Versions 3.6.3 through 3.6.41 are not compatible with SpamSieve on macOS 10.14, but version 3.6.42 and later are. Apple Mail from macOS 10.13 and later (including macOS 13 Ventura).
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