Unibox Gmail



Last Updated on April 23, 2017 by

Unibox Gmail Login

Unibox 1.7.2

Unibox gmail.com

When comparing Unibox vs Opera Mail, the Slant community recommends Opera Mail for most people. In the question 'What are the best e-mail clients for macOS?' Opera Mail is ranked 4th while Unibox is ranked 17th. Inbox by Gmail is going away at the end of March 2019. Use the new Gmail to help you get more done and continue your conversations without interruption. Unibox is a people centric email client that organizes your messages by person. In contrast to the tedious to-do list that email is today, Unibox allows you to concentrate on actual communication. When using automatic configuration, Unibox will send a request containing the domain of your email to our servers, e.g. 'example.com' if your email address is 'mail@example.com'. On our servers we keep a list of configurations for many providers.

Developer: eightloops GmbH

Description

Unibox

A completely new way to organize your emails.

“Unibox’s slick interface and contact-centric design make it the best client we tried.” — Appleinsider
“It’s easily the simplest and most unique email app on the Mac right now.” — MacAppStorm
“A welcome, fresh new approach to email on the Mac” — Macworld
“Unibox Makes E-mail About People, Not Boring Old Mailboxes” — Cult Of Mac

Unibox is an email client that groups your messages by sender. This way your emails are organized automatically and you always find what you are looking for.

Unibox supports IMAP servers:
– Gmail
– iCloud, me.com, mac.com
– Yahoo!
– Exchange if IMAP is enabled
– Hotmail, outlook.com, live.com
– Fastmail
– QQMail
– Self-hosted IMAP servers
– Many more

Single window:
Instantly compose your messages without opening new windows.

Conversations:
Easily drill down into a conversation view with multiple participants.

Powerful Filters:
Show only messages that are unread, starred, have attachments or were sent by people from your address book.

Unified Accounts:
View messages and conversations across all your accounts.

Switch Accounts:
Focus on single accounts or folders when necessary.

Attachment List:
Quickly find documents and files you exchanged with other people.

Attachment Grid:
Visually browse your attachments and images.

Quicklook:
Preview attachments without launching external apps.

Aliases:
Use multiple identities with a single account, including separate SMTP servers.

Unibox Gmail Sign In

Btw, Unibox is now also available for iPhone and iPad.

What’s New in Version 1.7.2

Unibox gmail app

Unibox Email

* Improved MacOS Sierra compatibility
* Bugfix for fullscreen mode
* Bugfix for timeout error that occurs with some providers and self-hosted servers.

Download Unibox for macOS Free Cracked

AppDrop.net

I have been using GMail since its very first version, back in 2004. For several years, it was my email system of choice, until Google Inbox came along. That was like GMail 2.0 for me. But unfortunately, Google discontinued it some time ago, and so I moved on – to Office 365 (now Microsoft 365). Outlook is a good email solution – but it fails in various areas in which GMail worked for me, and so, GMail became something different for me: My Universal Inbox.

The concept of Universal Inboxes is quite well known from GTD, one of my life saver books. Although I reworked my productivity setup about 300 times over the last 15 years or so, many principles defined by David Allen still hold true. I am still maintaining what David calls a “Project” system (I call it “Topics & Workstreams” in my methodology), and the general concepts of “Inbox Zero”, “Next Action”, “Weekly Reviews” and many others are still at the core of my way of working.

So, how does GMail work as Universal Inbox? It’s as simple as it sounds – whatever happens, whatever I need to note down quickly, I just “post it” to my GMail Inbox. As I am (nearly) the only person still sending emails to that address, it’s not cluttering at all.

Once or twice per day, I run through my Universal Inbox, and with each item, I do one of the following things:

Unibox Mail

  • If it’s a task that I need to complete soon, I mark it with a star. That triggers my Zapier automation in the background, and creates a new todo item in Todoist. I keep the mail item in the inbox for review (weekly clean-up).
  • If it is something I needed to keep for reference, I forward or copy/paste the information to Evernote (using my personalized mail address for Evernote). I then archive the mail item, removing it from the GMail inbox.
  • If it is something I need to review at some point in the future, I typically make some comment regarding the when & why, by forwarding/replying that information to myself – this basically creates a new item in the email thread, and I technically created a personal note on the original email item. I then use the Snooze function go Mail, which postpones the whole thread to some point in the future, at which it appears again, including the information I attached to it.
  • I use the technique of forwarding/replying to myself (often called FRETMY by the pro’s, or “note to self” by noob’s) for many things – it’s a good (and in 99% the only) way to attach personal comments/notes to emails. I use FRETMY to remind me to work on documents (links to Dropbox, OneNote or GMail), or I use it for extending on a though that I had earlier. Funny enough, it is also covering 50% of all use cases for which I used “Note Taking” apps – because more often than not, notes are not being changed, they are just being amended (for “real” quick notes, I mostly use Apple Notes and/or Evernote). The only notes not remaining in GMail are notes that belong to a larger topics or work stream (called “Project” in GTD) – for that, I use another tool which I will share here in the future.

That’s my quick summary of how I use GMail as Universal Inbox (or “Unibox” as the pro’s like to say). In general, I found it to be a very good practice to separate my Unibox from my real email inbox (for which I am using Outlook with a different methodology) – it allows me to selectively use it, and not make every email important by default.

Unibox Gmail.com

I hope my post was helpful for you – and maybe, you put it in your Unibox, with some FRETMY notes attached to it.