![]() The search also works well, which was lacking in some of the other email apps I tried. Overall, I am so pleased with Newton! The App is super responsive and quick, which has made me very happy. You can right click to insert as inline image, but you do not have any ability to resize the image in that view. When you drag/drop an image into your message, it adds the picture as an attachment instead of an inline image.There is no way to insert canned text or to have multiple signatures (though canned text is on their roadmap).On iOS, there is no way to auto-advance to the next message when you archive or delete.I will mention some things that aren’t available in Newton that I was hoping to see: It took no time for me to get started and comfortable using Newton. Their support has been super responsive (and I sent them a batch of questions!) and both the Mac App & iPhone App have been very smooth. But, I have been more than impressed with my free trial (you get a 14-day free trial). And it is hard to justify the cost when there are free alternatives out there, like Spark. Which pretty much is the situation I am now in :) Paying a little over $4/month for something that will save me time and be frustration-free would be an investment I would be up for however, there is no guarantee of that which keeps me a bit hesitant. I was afraid that I would test it out and really like it. That’s what has held me back from trying Newton before this. Unfortunately, Newton does carry a price tag of $50/year. This can come in handy to quickly learn more about the person who is emailing you.I can check an option to only send this email if the recipient does not reply before the time I have set.Again, I can simply type Thursday at 2pm, or I can use the calendar to choose the date/time I want the email send.So no more setting reminders to follow-up on sent emails! If you choose “remind if not replied,” the email will pop back to your inbox at the time you specify only if your recipient does not reply before the selected time. Remind If Not Replied – essentially, this provides the same snooze options that are available with emails you receive.When sending emails, I have follow-up options, including:.The gmail keyboard shortcuts that I am used to are supported in Newton.The left sidebar is hidden by default so that I can focus on my inbox with no distractions.When I want to snooze to a custom date/time, I can simply type “tomorrow 10am” and it will come back to my inbox on that date/time. I love that the snooze feature understands written text.My very first impression – Newton is clean and simple! I love this.I have only been using Newton for the past week, but I wanted to share my first impressions in this post. As well, I have not had the best experience with their customer support. But in the past couple months, I have run into stability issues with Spark and have found some features (such as Send Later) were lacking. With Airmail, I was initially so excited at the number of integrations it had, but ultimately found it was not as clean and simple a solution. Polymail had a lot of promise when I started using it, but I had issues with syncing and just did not like the overall experience as much as I liked Spark at the time. ![]() Before choosing Spark, I had evaluated Polymail and Airmail. ![]() For the past year, I have been using Spark. And ever since, I have tried to find its perfect replacement. I was in love with Mailbox before it shut down. Now, I don’t abuse this feature just to get my email down to 0 at the end of the day! But using the Snooze feature to schedule my emails for a time that I know I will be able to deal with it has helped me tremendously. How I manage my inbox is largely in thanks to email apps that allow you to “Snooze” emails. ![]()
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