

Unibox
18 likes
Unibox is a people centric email client that organizes your messages by person. It avoids having email like a to-do list.
Features
- Ad-free
- Unified inbox
- Email Organizer
- Multiple Account support
- Full-Text Search
- Conversational email approach
- IMAP Support
- Inbox Management
Tags
- Email grouped by sender
- email-management
- gmail-client
- outlook
- imap-client
Unibox News & Activities
Highlights All activities
Recent activities
Featured in Lists
A list with 142 apps by boniaditya without a description.
List by boniaditya with 142 apps, updated
What is Unibox?
Unibox is a people centric email client that organizes your messages by person. It avoids having email like a to-do list.
Features:
- Unibox supports IMAP servers: Gmail, iCloud, me.com, Yahoo!, Exchange if IMAP is enabled, Hotmail, outlook.com, live.com, self-hosted IMAP servers, and many more
- Single window: Instantly compose your messages without opening new windows.
- Conversations: Easily drill down into a conversation view with multiple participants.
- Unified Accounts: View messages and conversations across all your accounts.
- Switch Accounts: Focus on single accounts or folders when necessary.
- Attachment List: Quickly find documents and files you exchanged with other people.
- Attachment Grid: Visually browse your attachments and images.
- Quicklook: Preview attachments without launching external apps.
- Aliases: Use multiple identities with a single account, including separate SMTP servers.







Comments and Reviews
Revolutionary concept – making E-Mailing more like Instant Messaging.
Very nice concept, immediately feels natural (though maybe not useful for long multi-recipient threads). Unfortunately, development seems to stop a few years ago — latest updates were just compatibility patches for new OS versions. No dark mode, for example.
Also, it doesn't use proxies defined in network settings. Quite a pain to use behind university proxy.
Seems to be abandoned, which is really too bad.
Spark, Outlook and Polymail should definitely be added to the list of alternatives.
[Edited by pacorob, February 29]