Thunderbird syncs up easily with the major providers like Outlook, Gmail and Yahoo, but you can manually set it up to play nice with most IMAP and POP3 email services. With support for an unlimited number of email accounts, tons of plugins and lightning-quick functionality, its place on the email client throne is well deserved. The first port of call for most people looking for a swift alternative to Outlook, Thunderbird has been around for a long time and continues to impress. It has a great dark theme option too, and the only thing we can really say against it is that the free version limits you to using it with just two email accounts (the unlimited/commercial version is $50). Where other clients tend to look and feel a bit “20 years ago”, eM Client feels decidedly of this day and age.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |