Exactly. The problem here is that the company has set a policy not to support $100,000 medical equipment after 5 years. Mind boggling - imagine if an aircraft manufacturer said the same thing. Using aircraft as an example, they are still in service after 50 years and parts still available for many of them. A similar approach should be taken to equipment like this exoskeleton
Best features Polymail has offered has been mostly the augmentations over IMAP/POP3 stuff in other apps like Apple Mail. I'm talking about Unsubscribe, Block Sender, and Snooze. I used these a lot since joining Polymail.
However, I never found the ease of achieving Inbox Zero like I did with Mailbox. I don't think anything has gotten close to that, and I still miss it as I'm pretty sure it was the perfect mail app.
Polymail's read receipts were very useful, even after they got blurred out, it was still great to get the "Someone read..." notifications.
Signatures were so clean and synced across my devices without any problems.
Dislikes about Polymail (and stopping me from switching to a paid plan) - hard to refresh inbox (I still don't know how to force this apart from quit and reopen on Mac), the fact that it is not a native app (Electron or similar), weird behaviour when tapping a new push notification on iOS (sometimes the previously read email would stay open), just general non-native feelings.
I can't really justify the price and I never used any of the enterprise features, we use Slack for all that stuff, plus I am not a salesperson and if I were in the founder role of selling hard and raising money again I would probably invest in Superhuman.
As a thought, I will probably switch to Airmail as its $10 a year price point for a passive email user seems just right.
Best of luck with growing Polymail and good on you for giving it a new lease of life :)
No problem! I've forked the Android version from somebody else on Github and haven't made many changes to it yet, so the credit for that one should go to http://github.com/slymax.
I plan to make an Android one as simple as this. Google are working hard to make development easier but it's still a very poor experience compared to Xcode.
Cordova does indeed do this, and gives you access to iOS hardware APIs. This doesn't.
With this in mind, the reason I made it was for projects which don't require those things. There is no middleware here, just a very simple Xcode project with a couple of code modifications.
You can literally drop an existing web app into this and get going! :D