GyazMail is a email client software for Mac OS X, based on Cocoa framework, simple, easy-to-use with many features.

Ymail2 is described as 'YMail2 is a standalone email client for Windows (and Linux), available for free since 2003. Now with SSL support included so you can use it with Gmail and Hotmail POP3 and SMTP accounts' and is a Email Client in the office & productivity category. There are more than 25 alternatives to Ymail2 for a variety of platforms, including Windows, Mac, Linux, Android and BSD apps. The best Ymail2 alternative is Thunderbird, which is both free and Open Source. Other great apps like Ymail2 are Evolution, Microsoft Outlook, eM Client and Apple Mail.
GyazMail is a email client software for Mac OS X, based on Cocoa framework, simple, easy-to-use with many features.

Pandora Mail is Windows desktop e-mail client used to access POP3/IMAP mailboxes and to send mail via standard SMTP protocol.

Koma-Mail is an email client which is comfortable and has very handy functions. It does not need an installation, so that you can run Koma-Mail from your flash drive but, of course, also on your desktop.








EmailTray is a smart email client and an email notifier for POP3 and IMAP email accounts, including Gmail, Hotmail, Yahoo mail and AOL. EmailTray intelligently ranks messages, prioritizes them into 4 Inboxes and alerts you only to the most important.




TrulyMail is an email client and a private messaging system, very feature rich (voice recording, script blocking, etc.).




ProfiMail is a powerful email client for mobile phones. It allows you to read your mail on the go, and send text with attachments directly from your phone. Send photos, recorded sound or simply text messages to friends, from anywhere.
Features:




Navigate messages with zooms and swipes across your messages.
Turn your email into colorful, visual tiles you can explore with your fingers or mouse. Rich 3D visualizations and familiar gestures make TouchMail the fastest and easiest way to keep your inbox clean and keep import.


