Cloudmagic For Mac Review
See more reviews for Newton Newton Mail (was CloudMagic Email) is a subscription-based service that supercharges your email with power features like Read Receipts, Snooze, Send Later, Undo Send, Sender Profile, Connected Apps and more across iPhone, iPad, iPad Pro, Apple Watch and Mac.
I'm trying to decide which is better. I have used both but I need advice which to use. I'm wondering which one uses less system resources and so forth. Cloudmagic has all 3 (Mac, iPhone & iPad apps). So it syncs across all my devices using the same app. Airmail has only a Mac App (with iPhone is beta & iPad beta coming soon), so on iPad I would need to use different app for now.
I am currently running Cloudmagic on all 3 devices & it feels like it uses no resources on the Mac staying open all the time. On 4 GB Ram I'm still able to have Cloudmagic, Fantasical & over 10 Chrome tabs open with no lag at all. I've even tried opening Photoshop at same time without problem.
Is Airmail also low resource like this? I like Airmail for it's features which is why it's a hard decision I need advice on. I'm currently using the paid version of Airmail with my iMac and Cloudmagic with my Android phone and my iPad. It's a tough decision for sure as while I do think Airmail is a big improvement over Mac Mail, it could be more simple-looking and intuitive. I mean I like that it has all these features but I probably use only 5% of them. Now Cloudmagic is simple-looking and intuitive but, from what I hear about the OS X app, it's a little too barebone right now. Then there's the price issue.
Cloudmagic is $20 which to me is outrageous for such a simplified and feature-lacking app. I mean they could've at least had an introductory sale or something. I can think of only Fantastical 2 that was a bigger shock to me pricewise and even that app was preceded by a much cheaper version that was on sale plenty of times. Now there is one thing going for Cloudmagic. As the mobile app has stayed the same with no Cloudmagic I, Cloudmagic II. One could assume that the 20 bucks gets you lifetime updates. This isn't the case with Airmail as owner's of the first version had to pay the full price for the second version which doubled the price.
So, when Airmail III arrives, people with the 10-buck Airmail 2 might have to pay 20 dollars to get the newest version. Cloudmagic is getting some good reviews and while many are upset the price, it's nowhere the sh#tstorm Fantastical got when they came out with the current version and its price. I'll probably hold on to Airmail but when Cloudmagic goes on sale, I'll probably get it (and make my mother get it as she desperately needs a simplified and intuitive e-mail client).
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Email apps are a dime a dozen at this point, and each one is continuously attempting to compete with others in any way they can. Today, takes their app one step further in a small, but significant way. With Sender Profile, CloudMagic will now be able to quickly show you more information on the contact emailing you using various social media sources. More often than not, most emails I receive come from new senders or contacts. I usually spend a few moments deducing who they are, how I know them, or if I’ve ever worked with them in the past. CloudMagic’s new Sender Profile immediately solves that problem for me by pulling together a contact image and related details making that discovery all the faster. Sender Profile pulls information from LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter to grab job titles, organizations, and locations for your email’s sender.