Nylas N1 For Mac

The Nylas communications platform allows developers to quickly build features that connect to every email, calendar, and contacts provider in the world. Back in January, the folks at Nylas announced that Nylas N1, their flagship email client was being rebranded as Nylas Mail and also introduced a free version of the app, called Nylas Mail Basic. Nylas Mail Basic included most of the features of the Pro version, but was only available for Mac when the announcement was made.

Nylas N1
Developer(s)Nylas
Repository
Written inElectron (software framework) (C++, JavaScript, etc.), React (JavaScript library)
Operating systemWindows, Linux and OS X
LicenseMIT
Websitenylas.com/nylas-mail/

Nylas Mail is an open-source desktop email client by Nylas, known for its emphasis on user-contributed extensions. It was formerly known as Nylas N1 and was rebranded as Nylas Mail starting with the January 17, 2017 release.[1]

Nylas discontinued Nylas Mail, ceased further development, and made the code available under the MIT License on September 6, 2017.[2]

Features[edit]

Nylas Mail is compatible with multiple Gmail, Yahoo, Microsoft Exchange, and IMAP accounts, and is cross-platform on Linux, OS X, and Windows. The application accommodates user-written plugins. It has several layout styles in single or double panels, and has fullscreen and offline modes.[3] By default, its mail sync functions are processed in a cloud owned by Nylas, the company responsible for the project.[4] N1 added a unified inbox in February 2016[5] and PGP encryption support in June 2016.[6]

Reception[edit]

At the beginning of 2016, Macworld wrote that the software looked promising and had a better chance of enduring longer than past software—such as Sparrow and Mailbox—due to its open source license.[7]The Next Web highly praised N1's extensions features and wrote that it could become for email what Google Chrome is to web browsing.[8] N1 was the third most popular email desktop client among AppleInsider readers as of January 2016.[9]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^Grinich, Michael. '🎉 Nylas Mail is now free!'. Retrieved July 24, 2017.
  2. ^'Sunsetting Nylas Mail Development'. Retrieved December 19, 2017.
  3. ^'N1 Email Client -- A User-Friendly Option'. January 22, 2016.
  4. ^Sneddon, Joey-Elijah (October 5, 2015). 'N1 Is A Beautiful Open Source Email App for Linux'.
  5. ^'New Features Added to Nylas N1 Email Client'. February 7, 2016.
  6. ^'How to use the Nylas PGP plugin to encrypt/decrypt N1 email'. June 16, 2016.
  7. ^'Nylas N1 review: Open-source Mac email client shows promise'. January 11, 2016.
  8. ^Swanner, Nate (October 5, 2015). 'This app could do for email what Google Chrome did for browsing the Web'.
  9. ^'AI readers choose Airmail, Outlook and Nylas N1 as top email apps'.

External links[edit]

Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nylas_Mail&oldid=886731671'

Nylas N1 is an open source and extensible desktop email client developed by a small firm name Nylas. It’s available for Linux, Mac and Windows. The latest stable version, 0.4.49, was released on August 19, 2016.

Nylas N1 features a straightforward, modern and beautiful user interface. It’s compatible with Gmail, Microsoft hotmail, outlook, Yahoo mail, Microsoft exchange, AOL mail and also supports generic email servers.

Nylas N1 includes the following features out of the box:

  • Enriched contacts
  • Open and Click Tracking
  • Snooze
  • Send later
  • Quick relpy templates
  • Meeting requests
  • Send availability
  • Mail Merge
  • Translation
  • PGP encryption

Note: Your email will go through their servers. See privacy issues here. Use it at your own risk.

Install Nylas N1 Email Client on Ubuntu, Fedora

Go to the download page to download the latest version. You can also use the following command to download it in terminal.

Once it’s downloaded, open up a terminal window and navigate to the download folder. Run the below command to install Nylas N1.

Debian/Ubuntu/Linux Mint

The installation will automatically create a source list file which contains the Nylas N1 repo.

she has one of the most beautiful art I've seen, but she left DA a bit ago. So I haven't uploaded anything in a long time.so I'll just post this little one, who happens to be one of the few girls that I've made.;;Artwork from Ijiwaru My Master is by.sighs. Ijiwaru my master.

Fedora

CentOS

OpenSUSE

Arch Linux users can install it from AUR with Yaourt package manager.

Once installed, you can start it from Unity Dash or your favorite application menu. Happy mondays - bummed.

After clicking the Get Started button, Nylas N1 will introduce you to some of its features. Click Next.

Then you will see the following sign in page.

What you need to do now is to go to billing.nylas.com to create an account, then come back here an sign in with your newly created account.

Once you are signed in, choose your Gmail, Microsoft Exchange or other email account to set it up.

You can also select IMAP/SMTP Setup if you have your own email server.

You can choose one panel or two panels. Once that’s done, you can now using N1 to receive and send emails.

Would I use it as my daily email client? No, I have already set up my own email server and I really don’t want a company to manage it for me.

What are your thoughts about Nylas N1 email client? Are you worried about privacy when using it? As always, if you found this post useful, then subscribe to our free newsletter or follow us on Google+, Twitter or like our Facebook page. Thanks for visiting!

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