Brings improved snooze support and faster address autocomplete suggestions to the Gmail-specific email app. ($49.99 new, free update, 12.3 MB, macOS 12+)
Resolves an issue with conversation view failing to respond to clicks in macOS 14.4 Sonoma. ($49.99 annual subscription, free update, 12.3 MB, macOS 12+)
Brings a few handy features and bug fixes to the Gmail-specific email app. ($49.99 new, free update, 12.2 MB, macOS 12+)
Improves autocomplete suggestions for the Gmail-specific email app. ($49.99 annual subscription, free update, 12.1 MB, macOS 12+)
Brings autocomplete improvements and bug fixes. ($49.99 new, free update, 12.2 MB, macOS 12+)
Adds support for inline text predictions when composing messages in macOS 14 Sonoma. ($49.99 annual subscription, free update, 12.2 MB, macOS 12+)
Adds support for multi-day events and invitations received on Gmail aliases to the Calendar banner. ($49.99 annual subscription, free update, 12.2 MB, macOS 12+)
Adds Calendar banner support for invitations received on Gmail aliases. ($49.99 annual subscription, free update, 12.1 MB, macOS 12+)
Fixes bugs related to macOS 14 Sonoma. ($49.99 annual subscription, free update, 12.1 MB, macOS 12+)
Brings numerous improvements and bug fixes to the Gmail-specific email app. ($49.99 annual subscription, free update, 11.9 MB, macOS 12+)
Maintenance release focused on bug fixes for the Gmail-specific email app. ($49.99 annual subscription, free update, 12 MB, macOS 12+)
Maintenance update for the Gmail-specific email app, which recently graduated to 1.0 status. ($49.99 annual subscription, free update, 12 MB, macOS 12+)
The Gmail-specific email app Mimestream has emerged from a multi-year public beta with a 1.0 version that’s familiar, fast, and fluid. Adam Engst explains why he has chosen Mimestream as his preferred email client.
What third-party apps would you install on a clean Mac to restore your preferred working environment? Adam Engst recently had the opportunity to learn just what apps he really uses—here’s the list.
Prompted by a question from a reader about why images didn’t appear in printed copies of the TidBITS email issue, we look under the hood in WordPress to find the culprit.