I've used a slew of Linux email clients over the years, but I found only one that's truly exceeded my expectations.
Chromium-based Vivaldi 4.0 is out and it features Vivaldi's new email client, an RSS feed and calendar, which has been in the works for years. The browser is one of the most important places for work ...
To get all these new powerful tools up and running, download the new Vivaldi For Windows and go to the Settings–>General–>scroll down to Productivity features–>Enable Mail, Calendar, and Feeds. Let’s ...
Vivaldi has launched Vivaldi Mail 1.0. The email client is integrated within the web browser and offers a calendar and feed reader too. Vivaldi first introduced a beta version of this back in 2020.
Linux e-mail vendor @Mail Monday released an open source version of its Webmail client and is making it available for free. The client, @Mail Open, is AJAX-based and works against any e-mail server ...
The open source Thunderbird email client has a long and storied history, but until now, that history has been limited to the desktop. That’s about to change, according to a post on the Thunderbird ...
Yahoo may not be the internet giant it once was, but over 110 million people still use its mail services — now, that experience has been upgraded with a new Yahoo Mail web client as well as new apps ...
Setting an application to serve as the default mail app on your Mac means it opens automatically whenever you click a mailto link in a Web browser. Unless you've changed it, Mail is the default ...
Rick Broida is the author of numerous books and thousands of reviews, features and blog posts. He writes CNET's popular Cheapskate blog and co-hosts Protocol 1: A Travelers Podcast (about the TV show ...
From the Cheapskate: Or get the Pro version for just $24.97, a full 50 percent off the regular price! Either way, you've just found a superb replacement for Microsoft Outlook. Plus: Prime Day pricing ...
Reader Bob recently started seeing an unexpected message in his Google Chrome Web browser: Should he allow Chrome to act as “the default Gmail client”? Bob’s response: Yes or no? Why or why not? What ...