Pretty sure the G in Geary relates to Gnome, not Gmail. That is simply the naming convention that several Gnome and KDE focused projects follow. Gnome: Geary, Gparted, Gthumb, Gtranslator, Gnote, etc KDE: Konversations, Kate, Konsole, Kcalc, etc It's a way of making it crystal clear what desktop the application was made for.
Bad review; the main feature of gmail being labels (and how they do not work in the same way as gmail on thunderbird and others) was not tested and reviewed in this video. So far the only linux app that executes gmail labels how they're meant to be used has been mailspring. But unfortunately mailspring doesnt let you adjust the smtp server of a gmail account and causes SPF issues.
Pretty sure the G in Geary relates to Gnome, not Gmail. That is simply the naming convention that several Gnome and KDE focused projects follow.
Gnome: Geary, Gparted, Gthumb, Gtranslator, Gnote, etc
KDE: Konversations, Kate, Konsole, Kcalc, etc
It's a way of making it crystal clear what desktop the application was made for.
Thanks for the explanation. Also for stopping by. I appreciate the support! 👍🏾
Geary is the name of a major street in San Francisco
I managed to add gmail and Outlook to Geary but had no luck adding Yahoo mail account to Geary , doeas not accept the yahoo credentials
Geary and MailSpring are both excellent, but neither can import the 20 years of email I have stored in Thunderbird.
Bad review; the main feature of gmail being labels (and how they do not work in the same way as gmail on thunderbird and others) was not tested and reviewed in this video. So far the only linux app that executes gmail labels how they're meant to be used has been mailspring. But unfortunately mailspring doesnt let you adjust the smtp server of a gmail account and causes SPF issues.