At a glance

Cons

Mailbutler is a productivity extension for Apple Mail and Gmail that helps you manage your emails as Todoist tasks. Mailbutler lets you turn your emails into Todoist tasks without leaving your inbox. The tasks will be synced to your selected Todoist project. Activate the plugin Mailbutler.mailbundle by checking the checkbox. A pop up window will show and click on Allow Access button. Click Apply and Restart Mail. Open Apple Mail and start using Mailbutler. You should now see the icons for Mailbutler features like Snooze, Notes and Tasks within your email client. Mailbutler — Email in no time. Sep 24, 2018 3 min read. With much anticipation, Apple announced that macOS 10.14 Mojave will be available on the Mac App Store today. Since the first. Mailbutler is hiring a remote Senior Objective C Swift Developer For macOS Mail Plugins. How will you create impactYou will work on our plugin for Apple Mail, our most successful extension, used by thousands of professionals world-wideThere is only a handful of. Check out the updated video in 2019 here: about Email Scheduling: you ever wanted to send an email.

Our Verdict

Critics are quick to dismiss Apple’s built-in Mail app on OS X, but I prefer Mail over the new kids on the block, simply because it works and doesn’t try to reinvent the wheel. Of course, that doesn’t mean there aren’t some features in those rival apps I’d like to see make their way into Mail; the ability to schedule outgoing emails for a later date or save messages to Evernote, for example. As it turns out, I don’t have to abandon an old favorite for greener pastures to get these cool features.

At your service

Mac uninstall mailbutler

Billed as “your personal assistant for Apple Mail,” MailButler is a bundle of plugins that extend the capabilities of Apple’s email client. I’m talking about new features like uploading attachments to cloud services other than iCloud Drive, following up on sent emails that have gone unanswered, and both of my wish list features noted above.

Installing MailButler adds a new toolbar icon to Mail’s preferences window, where you configure the various options available. Settings are consolidated into seven categories for displaying account information, connecting to cloud services, or managing the many user interface enhancements added by the software.

One of the most obvious improvements are message list avatars, which help identify senders and recipients at a glance. (For example, emails from Amazon.com are magically adorned with the company’s logo.) MailButler extracts a sender’s image from your address book or connected social networks (Google+, Flickr, Gravatar); if all else fails, the software inserts a grey circle with the sender’s initials instead.

Mailbutler Mac

If you frequently work with attachments, MailButler will be your new best friend. In addition to uploading attachments to services like Dropbox, Google Drive, and Box (OneDrive support is curiously absent), the software intelligently scans outgoing emails before they’re sent and reminds you if files referenced in the message haven’t been attached. (Raise your hand if you’ve done that before!)

Take action

Mailbutler Macos Catalina

The latest addition to the lineup is Direct Inbox, which displays the last weeks’ worth of incoming messages in a compact panel right from the menu bar. Users can not only compose new messages here, but also act upon existing ones as well. Unfortunately, MailButler doesn’t display messages in a unified inbox view (they’re sorted by account), but a handy toggle switch shows only unread emails.

For those who habitually click Send before proofreading, MailButler can be configured to delay outgoing messages by a few seconds or more in case you change your mind. And yes, you can queue up one or more emails in the outbox and MailButler will send them at designated times in the future, perfect for newsletter publishers wrestling with the hourly sending limits imposed by hosting providers.

Unlike Mail plugins I’ve used in the past, MailButler doesn’t feel like a Frankenstein’s monster of pieces and parts haphazardly bolted onto the host software. Instead, everything works as a natural extension of Mail, like these features have been there all along and have only now been unlocked.

MailButler is free, with one catch: You can only use its unique features 30 times per month, but additional “actions” can be obtained through referrals; paid subscription tiers enable unlimited use and premium support. It’s a great value and I can’t imagine going back to regular Apple Mail after using MailButler; frequent updates also give me hope that things won’t break when macOS Sierra arrives this fall.

Bottom line

There’s no need to abandon Apple Mail for a fancier third-party email client. MailButler delivers the features you want in the software you already use.