OAuth Office365-compatible Mail Client? - General Questions and Answers

I have two Office365 accounts, one corporate, one personal domain. I can't add "app passwords" to the corporate one, so I need oauth2 support - i.e. the mail client presents the native sign on and then records the token. But I also need folder support, and want contact and calendar integration support, especially because I can't get the phone (HTC M8 running LeeDroid Marshmallow) to sync/auth for those either.
The only client I've found with all of that is Microsoft's Outlook. Cloud Magic comes close, but doesn't sync contacts for the phone nor calendar. Nine and others don't do OAuth. But Outlook only syncs the inbox - it can't be set to sync additional folders - so it isn't much good for filing your email as it comes in.
Is there a client that can do all this?

Related

Best email, contact & calendar provider online for PocketPC users ?

Hello,
I am a PocketPC user, and I want to completely reorganize the way I am using my private emails, contact & calendar !
I would like to manipulate my data (email, contact & calendar), on the PocketPC AND online on the Web.
Which solution email/contact/calendar solution do you recommend me ?
I have listed these solutions (do you know other possibilities ?):
- Google and Zoho PIM suite: The good, it is online and free. The bad is that there is no way to sync them with the PocketPC.
- Microsoft Exchange: The good, it is on the Pocket PC. The bad, it is costs money.
chris
I use Yahoo. Sync device with Outlook; Outlook and device always the same. Outlook syncs with Yahoo contacts, calendar, etc via Intellisync. So I have a nice backup of everything on Yahoo, can still access things on Yahoo mobile or Yahoo full web.
Outlook on Desktop.
pOutlook on Device.
Yahoo Intellisync to sync Yahoo and Outlook.
Sync Device to Outlook, Outlook to Yahoo.
However this takes mental energy to remember which will be the home to the 'correct' info. So if you edit things in Yahoo, on your phone and in Outlook without first syncing everythign, you can run into issues.
I recently moved to a Service Desk software for my business. It is a served application and I just go to the WWW address to get all the info. Interent dependent though...and web browsing is slow when under the gun...
I also know that if you use the Yahoo mobile plugin system that you pretty much just work from within that shell. Its good for some. I guess it is called Y! Go. I had it on my 8125 and it worked well, a bit slow on the 8125.
I didn't know about this Yahoo sync system. I will have a look at it.
If I understand your feedback, what you are missing is: the need to sync your contacts/calendar directly online from your PocketPC. That's right ?
I do agree with you, the best solution would be to be able to sync online all your applications, that ís the application on the PocketPC (POutlook) and the application on the PC (Outlook).
As far as I know, only Microsoft Exchange is offering this possibility. But it costs quite a lot..
Chris
Google Apps and mail2web
I really like googlemail, and actually use google apps for domains to manage a couple of domain names. I've set up Outlook using IMAP to connect to these accounts but do not schedule mail download. This allows me to easily send emails from my account.
I've then set up mail forwarding within googlemail to a free mail2web account, that is in effect Exchange. This is set up as a push account within Outlook(works really well). Within googlemail I have a rule setup to archive mails once they are forwarded, this gives me a clean inbox should I wish to bring up the IMAP connection to view archived mail.
Could anyone using MS Exchange, give a feedback about this solution ?
Nick, why don't you just use your MS Exchange account (mail2web) ? it seems to me that you don't need to have a gmail account.
Chris
With Mail2web I can only reply and send mails as [email protected]
If I want to send an email from my own domain I need to do it through my Google Apps for Domains setup.
If mail2web could handle personal domains it would be fine. Google do a really good job of this with regard to MX records and reverse dns lookups.
Hosted Exchange would be a nice solution: admitted it costs a few euros per month (6 here) but you get a mailbox which WinMo directly syncs with (without any dirty hacks, plugins and stuff) plus a quite nice webmail/calendaring/collaboration environment (Outlook Web Access).
According to your post, it seems that MS Exchange is actually the only "clean" (=acceptable) way to have the possibility to have your email/contact/calendar on your PocketPC and online.
So, I definitely need to have a look at the offers to see how much it is. Do you know a comparison table of the different companies offering Exchange hosting ?
Nick, i understand now why you still use Google. I do think you can use your own domain with Exchange thought. Maybe not with mail2web.com , but other competitors probably offer this.
How much do you pay for your hosted Exchange ?
spone1, I agree with your conclusion. Which Exchange hosting provider do you use ?
Chris
Mail2web is free!! You may as well sign-up just to see how Push/Active Sync works.
So 95% of the benefits of Exchange (active sync, Outlook Web access etc.) but just no domain hosting. I don't have that many mails that I need to reply to from my domain when I am out and about, so it's really not that big a deal for me to quickly switch accounts when I need to. I'm sure I could get hosted Exchange including a domain or two, but I'd expect it would be between £50 and £100 pounds a year, and wouldn't really give me that much benefit.
But the benefit of having push email is great. ActiveSync does seem to occassional have trouble connecting if my connection type changes through the day. Eg, I connect via WIFI at home, then in the car the phone will pick up 3G, thn by the time I'm at work I'm down to GPRS, at some locations in work I can pick up WIFI again and then for the return journey etc. It can be fixed be manually synchronising to get things running again, but that does kind of defeats the object of push email.
Another alternative is to run your own mail server. It doesn't have to be MS Exchange, there are other that are compatible. But this seems a little like too much hard work without much benefit.
Don't forget that you can use Google with any domain by using Google Apps.
They currently handle MX records for my Domain.
Yeah, Google apps is great, and would be perfect for me if it could handle push email. IMAP isn't the end of the World, just not as slick.
Google apps is my primary mail handler. In effect all mail2web is doing for me is adding push capability
Cloud winmo now
I have a setup that works great for me.
I use a beta (free) service mobipush for push gmail. http://www.mobipush.com/
I use remember the milk for tasks that can be a plugin in google calendar and sync wirelessly with your outlook mobile tasks.
https://www.rememberthemilk.com/
(there is a gadget to add RTM to your gmail screen and intergrated into google calendar.)
I use ogg sync for syncing contacts and calendar.
http://oggsync.com/
Something extra!!!
I also us Jott to add via voice tasks and calendar events to remember the milk and google calendar when I can't type. i.e. when driving.
http://jott.com
This system gives me the cloud experiance of a google phone with the power of a winmo device
I used 4smartphone.net hosted Exchange and before that I'd been using Intellisync for over-the-air sync with Lotus Domino. Intellisync solution was a good one as it provided rather comprehensive sync options. However, I'd been using it few years ago, so I don't really know whether this solution is still available (looks like Nokia had bought Intellisync).
Exchange solution is great for its native support, but lacks few features (like separate folders support and OTA sync for notes).
I think that hosted Exchange 2007 is the preferred option.
Nick-- said:
With Mail2web I can only reply and send mails as [email protected]
If I want to send an email from my own domain I need to do it through my Google Apps for Domains setup.
If mail2web could handle personal domains it would be fine. Google do a really good job of this with regard to MX records and reverse dns lookups.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have my personal domain stuza.com pointing to my mail2web.com account and I love it. Works superbly. I can edit calender/contacts and it changes automaticaly on the mail2web server. Also saves a bucketload of time should you decide to flash your phone - you simply give it your email address and it goes away and autoconfigures the exchange settings and then pulls all your contacts/schedule data down. All my mail comes into [email protected] and goes out from [email protected] .... frickin sweet.
I will never live again without an exchange solution.
edit: dont know if it makes a diference but i have a paid mail2web account
Has anybody tried funambol.com? It is an open source project that I recently found. I haven't tested it with the exception of email but it does have contacts and calendar components. I hope it works for you!
gottago
Sprint Touch w/ WM 6.1
windows live mail
windows live mail works just like exchange, syncing calendar, mail, contacts...etc
Push mail works easily and without any setup. Usually it comes with wm6 phones, but you can also install the cab found on the forum.
Xilicon said:
windows live mail works just like exchange, syncing calendar, mail, contacts...etc
Push mail works easily and without any setup. Usually it comes with wm6 phones, but you can also install the cab found on the forum.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Okay my age is probably getting in the way, but don't you have to use Outlook to synch calendar? Has there been an upgrade to Windows Live Mail or something else I may be missing?
gottago
Sprint Touch w/ WM 6.1
gottago said:
Has anybody tried funambol.com? It is an open source project that I recently found. I haven't tested it with the exception of email but it does have contacts and calendar components. I hope it works for you!
gottago
Sprint Touch w/ WM 6.1
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Further on funambol.com and to the original poster's request. Funambol has it's own web site that will serve to pull/push email and contacts with GMail. I don't use the calendar on Gmail so I can not address that but Funambol provides you a myfunambol web page that will consolidate your email/contacts as well as any calendar/tasks/notes/briefcase on your PPC. So, in effect, you can go to your myfunambol page and see your email, contacts, calendar, etc. all in one place on the web as well as on your PPC. Funambol provides flexibility as to what it actually synchs so you remain in control. While you can schedule your synch times, it also has the option of synching on a 'push' basis. I will admit that this capability is not necessarily perfect at this point but it is clearly being worked on.
This is a great solution for me as I do not use Outlook (too cheap to buy) or Internet Explorer on my PC. I use Thunderbird/Lightning and Firefox. There is a Funambol plugin for Thunderbird that works well.
NOTE: I have no affiliation with Funambol other than as a user of this one product.
gottago
Sprint Touch w/WM 6.1

Gmail and Exchange push together in one app

Not sure if this is common knowledge or not, but one of the things that has been frustrating me the most about my first Android phone is that I seemingly needed to use both the Gmail app and the HTC Mail app in order to achieve push email for both my gmail account and my exchange account from work.
After searching I found that this is a problem with the Evo's implementation because of the limitation of HTC Mail only allowing one exchange account (and exchange accounts are the only that can use push in HTC Mail) and Gmail app only allowing, well Gmail of course.
Then I found the apk for the stock android email application. I read that this would allow for multiple exchange accounts to be setup, which obviously means Exchange will work with it, but then I can also setup my Gmail as an exchange account, and get push for both.
Thanks to rhedgehog for providing the apk here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=676069
And here is the information on setting up your gmail account through exchange:
username: [your full email i.e. [email protected]]
password: [your gmail password]
server: m.google.com
ssl: yes
accept certs: yes (not really sure this needed, but I checked it)
There are some caveats to this. Through the stock email, it only presents you with the option of syncing email and contacts. Due to this, I still setup my Google account through the phone's settings interface and had the Google account only syn calendar. I did the same for my work and setup an Activesync Exchange account to just sync calendar. In the end up, I have under settings > accounts, I have two "Corporate" accounts syncing only email/contacts, one Activesync Exchange syncing only calendar, and one Google account syncing only calendar. I am not sure if this affects battery life, but being that they are all using push, I don't see how this setup would use any more life that just two push accounts doing all three (calendar, contacts, and email). Email and contacts I have run through the email's exchange account.
The other issue I have with this setup is that I have not found a widget yet that integrates with the stock email client. So far all that I have seen intergrate with Gmail app, HTC Mail app, K9, Touchdown, but not the stock email app. Also I heard this client doesn't work with attachments, but this hasn't presented a huge problem for me yet.
Anyway, hope this helps someone. I know I was just really annoyed by having to use to different applications for my emails. There is even the combined inbox or separate inboxes to view so that it satisfies those like me that want it all together, versus those who want to view them separately.

[Q] Sync Outlook Email on Android (through USB, not Exchange)

I don't have Exchange, I just use Outlook at home with my POP3 account, is there any software I can use to Sync my Outlook emails to my phone (Android 2.2), just through USB sync? I can't find any.
I've got my contacts & calendar sync'ing fine, through HTC sync software.
This is so frustrating not having emails on my phone, I'm almost thinking of installing hMailServer onto my WHS box..
Appreciate the feedback.
HTC Desire HD.
configure your outlook to leave copy of messages on the server and add the same account to your phone using IMAP (or if you do not have IMAP access, set it as POP3 and also leave messages on the server)
I would have replied the same as the previous poster but maybe OP doesn't have a data plan?
Sent from my Vision using XDA App
That won't really sync with my outlook though, it's just checking the emails remotely, which I have been doing. I file all of my emails that I want to keep from my inbox into sub-folders, so I really need to sync my phone with Outlook.
Anyone else have some options before I start looking at setting up an SMTP server? Surely there's got to be something that will sync Outlook emails?
I was very surprised that the HTC sync software didn't do it!
I'm assuming by the lack of responce my only option is to setup a SMTP server..
I did find one cleaver idea, but isn't suitable for me, posting if anyone else is searching for a solution:
- Use Gmail (or similar) to pick up your email from your pop account
- Sync Outlook & phone with Gmail
The issue I have with this one is I use multiple domain names that I need to email out from..
gamm said:
I'm assuming by the lack of responce my only option is to setup a SMTP server..
I did find one cleaver idea, but isn't suitable for me, posting if anyone else is searching for a solution:
- Use Gmail (or similar) to pick up your email from your pop account
- Sync Outlook & phone with Gmail
The issue I have with this one is I use multiple domain names that I need to email out from..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is the best method. You can actually pull multiple accounts into GMail (up to 5, I believe), and then you can also set Gmail up so that you can send as one of those accounts. The latest version of Gmail for Android lets you choose which account you then want to use - right there on your phone.

10 Best Email Client Apps For Your Android Phone To Fullfil all your needs

Did you ever want to manage all of your emails right from your Android smartphone like professionals?
We know that even in this world of ongoing communication where most of the people opt for social media platforms to communicate with each other quickly. But there are a lot of professionals as well as authorities who still prefer to use emailing as their primary method of conversation.
And to keep up with all the emails and to be able to find and respond to the important ones that matter most to us, we need some unified emailing apps that make the whole emailing system smoother.
To help you out finding these useful email apps, here are the twenty best emailing apps for Android that will make your email organization and email responding task easier than ever.
#01 – Aqua Mail
Aqua Mail has made it to the list because of its versatility and ability to support multiple email services. So if you are one of those Android users who find it hard to manage multiple email accounts in different email apps, then Aqua Mail is for you.
The app user interface is highly configurable and works flawlessly on most of the Android phones. And if you are one of those advanced users who love to tinker with different apps and looking to automate Aqua Mail then you can even integrate it easily with Tasker app.
Supported Email Providers: Gmail, Hotmail (Outlook), Yahoo, Apple email (Cloud/ME), FastMail, AOL, GMX and several other email services as well as some hosted email accounts.
Supported Email Protocols: IMAP, POP3, and SMTP.
#02 – Blue Mail
Are you looking for an email client app for your Android phone that has a unified user interface for all of your email boxes? If yes, then Blue Mail would be the best app for you as it provides all of your emails in one place.
Blue Mail’s universal emailing system, the ultimate ability to manage a virtually unlimited number of mailing accounts, highly configurable, various personalization options for each account, and intelligent push notifications system is what makes it the perfect replacement for the stock mail app.
Supported Email Providers: Gmail, Hotmail (Outlook), Yahoo Mail, Office 365 and several other email services as well as some hosted email accounts.
Supported Email Protocols: IMAP, SMTP, Exchange and POP3 auto configuration.
#03 – Nine – Exchange Emailing
Nine brings the Exchange ActiveSync to the Android and provides direct push synchronization. It is the simplest and the fastest emailing app for your smartphone that connects you directly to the server.
The user interface is very powerful and provides you with several message filtrations. The app supports left and right swipe gestures that allow you to perform quick actions like deleting or moving a message.
The app comes with a free 14-days/2-weeks trial period, after which you can purchase the full version right from the Google Play for $9.99.
Supported Servers: Exchange Server 2003, Office 365, Outlook, Hotmail, Google Apps, and other services that support Exchange ActiveSync.
#04 – Alto
Alto is the emailing client app designed by AOL for Android smartphones and tablets. And it is one of the great alternatives for the native mobile email client that comes preinstalled on your mobile.
The app provides several features to improve your overall emailing experience. Some of those include multiple emails management, threaded email conversation view, active push notifications (with added personalization option), and the ability to organize all of your emails by category neatly.
Supported Email Providers: Gmail, Yahoo Mail, Hotmail (Outlook), Apple Mail (iCloud), AOL, Office 365, and any other IMAP email account.
#05 – TypeApp
TypeApp is a universal emailing client that has a material design and provides instant push notifications with customizable options (like quite hours and custom notification alerts) that will make sure to keep you updated with all of your emails and messages.
Unlike other apps mentioned in the list, TypeApp is efficient and allows you easily manage all of your email accounts within one app. You can perform bulk actions to categorize or mark multiple email messages at once.
Supported Email Providers: Gmail, Hotmail (Outlook), Yahoo, Apple email (iCloud/ME), AOL, and several other email services as well as some hosted email accounts.
Supported Email Protocols: IMAP, Exchange ActiveSync, POP3, and SMTP.
#06 – K-9 Mail
K-9 Mail is an open-source and community developed mobile mailing app. It supports a large number of email services and protocols along with lots of easy-to-customize options that can improve your overall email management experience.
The interface may look a little bit undeveloped to you, but I believe that you will admire the way it is going to handle all of your emails because it has been precisely designed to make it easier and less confusing for you to manage multiple mailing accounts.
Supported Email Providers: Gmail, Hotmail (Outlook), Yahoo, and several other email services as well as some hosted email accounts.
Supported Email Protocols: IMAP, POP3, SMTP, and Microsoft Exchange.
#07 – myMail
myMail is one of the most flexible and user-friendly emailing apps for Android. It provides you with hugely customizable push notifications for all of the email accounts along with support for multiple email account management that are added into the app.
You will also get the ability to filter notifications and emails you are receiving, based on the filters and folders you have created within the app. The app also gives you a “silent mode” that you can customize according to your work-life schedule.
Moreover, the search feature enables you to search through the contacts that are stored in your local storage as well as those stored in your email accounts.
Supported Email Providers: Google Mail, Microsoft Hotmail (Outlook), Yahoo Mail, AOL, GMX, Apple iCloud, and several other email services as well as some hosted email accounts.
Supported Email Protocols: Automatic setup and configuration for IMAP, SMTP, Microsoft Exchange and POP.
#08 – WeMail
WeMail is an intelligently designed email app that provides you with a unified inbox where all of your email accounts are nicely grouped by the sender’s name automatically. That is what makes your email management easy and clutter free, and reduces the overall length of your inbox by up to fifty percent.
Supported Email Providers: Google Mail, Microsoft Outlook, Yahoo Mail, and AOL.
Supported Email Protocols: IMAP. Support for the Exchange ActiveSync will be added shortly.
#09 – Microsoft Outlook
[appbox googleplay com.microsoft.office.outlook]
Microsoft Outlook is a fully featured mobile version of its desktop Outlook program and shares the same user experience as well as the user interface. The email client is very powerful and is well integrated with contacts and calendar.
The app is specifically designed to support Exchange ActiveSync account, but it also allows you to add IMAP and webmail accounts like Apple iCloud, Yahoo Mail, and Gmail.
#10 – Gmail
Gmail is an official Android emailing app and has been developed by Google itself, which is the reason why it comes preinstalled in every Android smartphone and tablet as a default email app.
Initially, the app was limited to the Gmail accounts only. However, the recent updates have officially added the support for various non-Gmail emailing services and protocols. And the developers have managed to improve it with every new release.
We all are very well aware of the Google’s idea of simplicity and material UI/UX. So the same has been implemented in the Gmail app, making the emailing experience clean and clutter free.
Supported Email Providers: Gmail, Hotmail (Outlook), Yahoo Mail, and several other email services as well as hosted email accounts.
Supported Email Protocols: IMAP, POP, and SMTP.
Which Email App Is Your Favorite?
Do you have any favorite email apps that I forgot to mention in the list? Please let me know down below, I would love to hear about them!
Please don't create duplicate threads. http://forum.xda-developers.com/android/apps-games/10-best-email-client-apps-android-phone-t3486502
Thread closed.

10 Best Email Client Apps For Your Android Phone With Everything you Need

Did you ever want to manage all of your emails right from your Android smartphone like professionals?
We know that even in this world of ongoing communication where most of the people opt for social media platforms to communicate with each other quickly. But there are a lot of professionals as well as authorities who still prefer to use emailing as their primary method of conversation.
And to keep up with all the emails and to be able to find and respond to the important ones that matter most to us, we need some unified emailing apps that make the whole emailing system smoother.
To help you out finding these useful email apps, here are the ten best emailing apps for Android that will make your email organization and email responding task easier than ever.

#01 – Aqua Mail
Aqua Mail has made it to the list because of its versatility and ability to support multiple email services. So if you are one of those Android users who find it hard to manage multiple email accounts in different email apps, then Aqua Mail is for you.
The app user interface is highly configurable and works flawlessly on most of the Android phones. And if you are one of those advanced users who love to tinker with different apps and looking to automate Aqua Mail then you can even integrate it easily with Tasker app.
Supported Email Providers: Gmail, Hotmail (Outlook), Yahoo, Apple email (Cloud/ME), FastMail, AOL, GMX and several other email services as well as some hosted email accounts.
Supported Email Protocols: IMAP, POP3, and SMTP.
*
*
#02 – Blue Mail
Are you looking for an email client app for your Android phone that has a unified user interface for all of your email boxes? If yes, then Blue Mail would be the best app for you as it provides all of your emails in one place.
Blue Mail’s universal emailing system, the ultimate ability to manage a virtually unlimited number of mailing accounts, highly configurable, various personalization options for each account, and intelligent push notifications system is what makes it the perfect replacement for the stock mail app.
Supported Email Providers: Gmail, Hotmail (Outlook), Yahoo Mail, Office 365 and several other email services as well as some hosted email accounts.
Supported Email Protocols: IMAP, SMTP, Exchange and POP3 auto configuration.

#03 – Nine – Exchange Emailing
Nine brings the Exchange ActiveSync to the Android and provides direct push synchronization. It is the simplest and the fastest emailing app for your smartphone that connects you directly to the server.
The user interface is very powerful and provides you with several message filtrations. The app supports left and right swipe gestures that allow you to perform quick actions like deleting or moving a message.
The app comes with a free 14-days/2-weeks trial period, after which you can purchase the full version right from the Google Play for $9.99.
Supported Servers: Exchange Server 2003, Office 365, Outlook, Hotmail, Google Apps, and other services that support Exchange ActiveSync.

#04 – Alto
Alto is the emailing client app designed by AOL for Android smartphones and tablets. And it is one of the great alternatives for the native mobile email client that comes preinstalled on your mobile.
The app provides several features to improve your overall emailing experience. Some of those include multiple emails management, threaded email conversation view, active push notifications (with added personalization option), and the ability to organize all of your emails by category neatly.
Supported Email Providers: Gmail, Yahoo Mail, Hotmail (Outlook), Apple Mail (iCloud), AOL, Office 365, and any other IMAP email account.

#05 – TypeApp
]TypeApp is a universal emailing client that has a material design and provides instant push notifications with customizable options (like quite hours and custom notification alerts) that will make sure to keep you updated with all of your emails and messages.
Unlike other apps mentioned in the list, TypeApp is efficient and allows you easily manage all of your email accounts within one app. You can perform bulk actions to categorize or mark multiple email messages at once.
Supported Email Providers: Gmail, Hotmail (Outlook), Yahoo, Apple email (iCloud/ME), AOL, and several other email services as well as some hosted email accounts.
Supported Email Protocols: IMAP, Exchange ActiveSync, POP3, and SMTP.

#06 – K-9 Mail
K-9 Mail is an open-source and community developed mobile mailing app. It supports a large number of email services and protocols along with lots of easy-to-customize options that can improve your overall email management experience.
The interface may look a little bit undeveloped to you, but I believe that you will admire the way it is going to handle all of your emails because it has been precisely designed to make it easier and less confusing for you to manage multiple mailing accounts.
Supported Email Providers: Gmail, Hotmail (Outlook), Yahoo, and several other email services as well as some hosted email accounts.
Supported Email Protocols: IMAP, POP3, SMTP, and Microsoft Exchange.
#07 – myMail
myMail is one of the most flexible and user-friendly emailing apps for Android. It provides you with hugely customizable push notifications for all of the email accounts along with support for multiple email account management that are added into the app.
You will also get the ability to filter notifications and emails you are receiving, based on the filters and folders you have created within the app. The app also gives you a “silent mode” that you can customize according to your work-life schedule.
Moreover, the search feature enables you to search through the contacts that are stored in your local storage as well as those stored in your email accounts.
Supported Email Providers: Google Mail, Microsoft Hotmail (Outlook), Yahoo Mail, AOL, GMX, Apple iCloud, and several other email services as well as some hosted email accounts.
Supported Email Protocols: Automatic setup and configuration for IMAP, SMTP, Microsoft Exchange and POP.

#08 – WeMail
WeMail is an intelligently designed email app that provides you with a unified inbox where all of your email accounts are nicely grouped by the sender’s name automatically. That is what makes your email management easy and clutter free, and reduces the overall length of your inbox by up to fifty percent.
Supported Email Providers: Google Mail, Microsoft Outlook, Yahoo Mail, and AOL.
Supported Email Protocols: IMAP. Support for the Exchange ActiveSync will be added shortly.

#09 – Microsoft Outlook
Microsoft Outlook is a fully featured mobile version of its desktop Outlook program and shares the same user experience as well as the user interface. The email client is very powerful and is well integrated with contacts and calendar.
The app is specifically designed to support Exchange ActiveSync account, but it also allows you to add IMAP and webmail accounts like Apple iCloud, Yahoo Mail, and Gmail.
#10 – Gmail
Gmail is an official Android emailing app and has been developed by Google itself, which is the reason why it comes preinstalled in every Android smartphone and tablet as a default email app.
Initially, the app was limited to the Gmail accounts only. However, the recent updates have officially added the support for various non-Gmail emailing services and protocols. And the developers have managed to improve it with every new release.
We all are very well aware of the Google’s idea of simplicity and material UI/UX. So the same has been implemented in the Gmail app, making the emailing experience clean and clutter free.
Supported Email Providers: Gmail, Hotmail (Outlook), Yahoo Mail, and several other email services as well as hosted email accounts.
Supported Email Protocols: IMAP, POP, and SMTP.
im using aqua
newton is really the best email app aver, it's very simple, great design, lightweight, and free. You can subscribe to a premium features, but even without them the app is just amazing. It's used to be called cloudmagic.
Just remember this when choosing an email app:
http://androidforums.com/threads/email-which-apps-keep-it-private.935578/
Btw: Newton = Cloud Magic
I'm using Alto. Tried almost all app in the list (except Nine which is not free) but my heart is with Alto. Want to vote but no Alto in the list, only Gmail and Aqua?
You can add a poll to the first post?
Sorry for my bad English.
Wysłane z mojego LG-H815 przy użyciu Tapatalka
Tatsch said:
Just remember this when choosing an email app:
http://androidforums.com/threads/email-which-apps-keep-it-private.935578/
Btw: Newton = Cloud Magic
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Read it. My favorite (Alto) is not secure!
K9 mail is not good enough. Aqua mail is limited to 2 accounts in free version. Mail Droid contains ads. What's left is [email protected] mail which is new to my ear. Tried it and [email protected] mail seems fantastic. A lot of features and customization. And secure too.
I'll use it side by side with Alto for next few days before I decide which one is better.
janolucero said:
newton is really the best email app aver, it's very simple, great design, lightweight, and free. You can subscribe to a premium features, but even without them the app is just amazing. It's used to be called cloudmagic.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's a good mail app but now it forces pay premium to use, unless it is not load new emails! 50$ for 1 year, too expensive to use with premium feature. I must uninstall it after 2 year using. It's a stupid Newton Mail development team.
Sent from my GT-I9082 using XDA-Developers Legacy app
I always prefer Gmail and recommend to others. It is free and very easy to use. One of the best things is to login to multiple accounts on a single browser at a time.
salmanfarisy said:
K9 mail is not good enough. .
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Could you please explain what you mean by this?
If you don't like the user interface: There's a forke with material design style, see https://f-droid.org/packages/com.fsck.k9.material/
M.Twain said:
I always prefer Gmail and recommend to others. It is free and very easy to use. One of the best things is to login to multiple accounts on a single browser at a time.
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Apart from that, you can also use NoxApp+, which can not only run multiple accounts for emails but also for many other apps like whatsapp. facebook, or even games, without even switching or quitting!!
#10 – Gmail, the only one I'm using.
markS991 said:
#10 – Gmail, the only one I'm using.
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Cuz i have to switch work and personal accounts, not only mails, so I found it useful.
bonisoul said:
Cuz i have to switch work and personal accounts, not only mails, so I found it useful.
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In some europ. countries using g-mail is not permitted without written permission of your partners: E-mail addresses and the mails itself are sensitive personal data and must not be stored on servers outside the EU without permissions of all who it may concern...
Aquamail:
Now there are advertisements even in pro key versions. Not ad-free anymore... See comments in play store.
FairEmail as an alternative has an more honest developer.
Download:
Last version of AquaMail without popup advertisements, when opening an attachment, see below. To use only with legal pro key of AquaMail.
This apk is signed with ZipSigner, so there won't be a request to update anymore.
Although many users complain, the Aquamail company does not want to remove this advertisement mentioned above from the paid and ad-free called version of Aquamail.
It is now installed from version 1.17 onwards.
Good Share! Using a Lockdown Solution to run these Apps would be great!
When it comes to enterprise, using a kiosk lockdown solution that allows managers or IT admin to control and manage devices by selecting apps, websites & content leads in improving.
thanks for the list.
I'm currently using Spike (formerly Hopmail) for my Gmail(s) and Swing Mail for my Outlook. Both have very good conversation UI and reliable push notifications. Swing Mail has another plus : it can handle Twitter DM with push notifications

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