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OmniMail. Is it time...Is it possible?
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Senior User
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Kuna, ID USA
Status:
Offline
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Many of us spend an significant portion of our day using email. For many, it is the life blood. So I wonder why it is that the offerings of a modern professional email application for X really does not exist.
So, I am thinking there is probably one firm that could actually do it: OmniGroup.
Something that goes beyond Mail.app, the features of Entourage, Eudora and MailSmith but wrapped in a UI that only Omni can seemingly deliver. An app that leaves useless features (buddy online, etc).
Of the top of my head, things to be included..using Mail.app features as a base:
- Threading that actually works across mailboxes
- a robust search feature
- robust rules
- User defined categories that can be manually set or by rules
- Multiple Flag types
- Priorities
- Built in formatting, not clumsy shaped palettes.
- Ability to send HTML email
- Junk FIlter (Spam Sieve, etc)l
- A UI that only Omni can deliver.
Of course, it would include integration with AddressBook, iCal and other Core Services.
I am sure there are others...
Discuss.
Omni: Ever thought about this? Ever consider it?
OmniMail: $59.95
The last word in email.
My New Years Wish!
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Professional Poster
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Somewhere, but not here.
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this has been discussed before. if i recall correctly, the reply from omni was a pretty firm "no"
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Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity...
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Senior User
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Kuna, ID USA
Status:
Offline
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DOH! That bites.
Mail had so much promise... and just seems to be lacking in love.
Don't get me wrong...I use it, I like it well enough...
But it can go so many places...
Email is that odd beast. It sounds flat and boring...but it is becoming ever more a HUGE part of our day. And good enough just isn't enough anymore.
There was once SweetMail, but it died. GyazMail shows promise...but only one dev makes it slow going.
Sigh.
(Last edited by :dragonflypro:; Dec 5, 2003 at 01:46 PM.
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Grizzled Veteran
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Seattle
Status:
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Not that it wouldn't be cool. Mail.app started out as one of the most promising os x applications and for me is one of the most disappointing.
~BS
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Grizzled Veteran
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Singapore
Status:
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Mail.app is good for the average user who doesn't have lots of demands for his e-mail program.
I don't like Mail.app because of the pull out sidebar thingy. It's clumsy, and occupies screen space. I wish that it would be smaller or even user adjustable.
And no, I don't wish to use Outlook.
If there was going to be a Mail.app replacement, it BETTER work with Address Book and iCal and etc.
IMHO. 
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mac.goodies webstore / Switched to an iBook in November 2002. Never looking back.
iBook R.I.P. 20 Nov 2002 - 2 Aug 2005
Hello Leopard! On iMac 17" Intel Core Duo 1.83GHz 2GB, iPod 5th gen 30GB and iPhone
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Viva Chile Mierda
Status:
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I actually like Mail.app (panther version that is).
I liked entourage too, but it just didn't feel like Mac OS X, plus I didn't need the extra stuff it had, just mail.
My only gripe towards Mail.app is it's crappy attachment management. It was improved a little in the panther version, but I still get problem from PC ppl. trying to open Word docs. for instance.
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:: frankenstein / lcd-less TiBook / 1GHz / radeon 9000 64MB / 1GB RAM / w/ext. 250GB fw drive
noname usb bluetooth dongle / d-link usb 2.0 pcmcia card / dell 2407wfp - X.5.3
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Grizzled Veteran
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Singapore
Status:
Offline
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Originally posted by Sarc:
I actually like Mail.app (panther version that is).
I liked entourage too, but it just didn't feel like Mac OS X, plus I didn't need the extra stuff it had, just mail.
My only gripe towards Mail.app is it's crappy attachment management. It was improved a little in the panther version, but I still get problem from PC ppl. trying to open Word docs. for instance.
I thought there's this Attach Windows-friendly attachments option in Panther Mail?
Have you tried it yet?
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mac.goodies webstore / Switched to an iBook in November 2002. Never looking back.
iBook R.I.P. 20 Nov 2002 - 2 Aug 2005
Hello Leopard! On iMac 17" Intel Core Duo 1.83GHz 2GB, iPod 5th gen 30GB and iPhone
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Senior User
Join Date: Jun 2002
Status:
Offline
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Originally posted by andretan:
Mail.app is good for the average user who doesn't have lots of demands for his e-mail program.
You've just figured out the universal constant behind all of Apple's consumer apps.
Replace Mail.app and "e-mail program" with any other combination of Apple consumer product and you'll see what I mean.
Examples: Safari is good for the average user who doesn't have lots of demands for his web browser.
iMovie is good for the average user who doesn't have lots of demands for his non-linear video editor.
iChat is good for the average user who doesn't have lots of demands for his instant messenger app.
etc. and so forth.
I don't know if this is just Apple's philosophy of design or an intentional move to ensure opportunities for third parties.
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Senior User
Join Date: Apr 2001
Location: Bolingbrook, IL, USA
Status:
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Originally posted by Mike S.:
You've just figured out the universal constant behind all of Apple's consumer apps.
Replace Mail.app and "e-mail program" with any other combination of Apple consumer product and you'll see what I mean.
Examples: Safari is good for the average user who doesn't have lots of demands for his web browser.
iMovie is good for the average user who doesn't have lots of demands for his non-linear video editor.
iChat is good for the average user who doesn't have lots of demands for his instant messenger app.
etc. and so forth.
I don't know if this is just Apple's philosophy of design or an intentional move to ensure opportunities for third parties.
They only give away their basic apps. Big, robust apps like Final Cut Pro aren't released for free. So they keep their iApps/bundled software down to create a market for users with cash who want more than what they're given for free. Or something. 
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Professional Poster
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: New York, NY
Status:
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Originally posted by :dragonflypro::
- Threading that actually works across mailboxes
- a robust search feature
- robust rules
- User defined categories that can be manually set or by rules
- Multiple Flag types
- Priorities
- Built in formatting, not clumsy shaped palettes.
- Ability to send HTML email
- Junk FIlter (Spam Sieve, etc)l
- A UI that only Omni can deliver.
Well first off, while I love OmniGroup, I think they have their hands full currently between OG, OO, and OO (not to mention the great little utilities OmniDictionary & OmniDisksweeper) and all the consultation/work they do for game companies and the like.
But more to the point: Mail.app is pretty durn good as it is. Yes it has some annoyances, but so does every app out there.
to your specific points:
- how much more robust do you need the search to be? Westlaw like searches? (look for word X within 10 words of Y???)
- rules are much more robust in Panther - what do you need to do that you can't already?
- categories? (like adding a color, but a word instead?)
- by built in formatting, I assume you mean having the font/color buttons appear within a window? (they appear exactly as they do in mail in OmniOutliner, and are till pallets of sorts in OmniGraffle...)
- HTML mail is the devil, but I agree that some increase in capabilities, even if limited to the signature, might be useful
- Mail's got a pretty durn good spam filter as it is...
- Omni's U.I. are definitely incredible - but at least initially, this brilliance came from providing Aqua-compliant apps. Since then, (esp. w/ OG 3) they've certainly improved things, but I'm not sure how much room for improvement there is in Mail. Sure some people hate the drawer: but the alternative itunes-like sidebar would surely take up just as much space. Just leave the drawer open...
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cpac
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Posting Junkie
Join Date: Dec 2000
Status:
Offline
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Originally posted by cpac:
- how much more robust do you need the search to be? Westlaw like searches? (look for word X within 10 words of Y???)
Being able to do something like "find an e-mail message with this word in it that was sent by this user before this date and after that date" would be handy sometimes.
- rules are much more robust in Panther - what do you need to do that you can't already?
It would be nice to be able to apply rules to outgoing mail instead of only incoming mail.
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Grizzled Veteran
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Seattle
Status:
Offline
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Panther solved a couple of problems (and introduced a couple), but the app is pretty rough.
Panther version does its hidden junk mail rule after all of your rules, so it's broken to anyone who sorts their email (and then has stop applying rules).
You can't select an email address to copy it from panther mail, and the contextual menu for the user droplet thing doesn't have a copy in it.
Space bar moves to the next message when you're at the bottom of an email, so if you hit spacebar a few times to get to the bottom of the message you're suddenly a few (short) messages down.
It constantly screws up with passwords. There's no indication on the dock icon when a few of your accounts aren't actually online anymore because it suddenly thinks the password doesn't work.
It's "Entire Message" search is NOT the entire message, just the message body. There's no way to search the entire message.
Terrible keyboard navigation.
Bad implementation of 'threading'.
No way to edit multiple accounts, many of the settings are a few clicks deep in a not so speedy interface.
New user gets a 'wizard', which is bad according to apple. And this wizard doesn't have many of the more advanced options. So users are forced into the vanilla settings which many mail servers (especially universities) require (like ssl). So your first experience with it is it a) sending your password cleartext and then b) failing. You need to hit cancel a bunch of times (trying to speedily do this for a friend I got stuck in a loop because the cancel button jumps back and forth in the 3 dialog boxes) and then go into the account setup screen (where you should be from the beginning) and then actually configure the account. (This was in Jag mail, not sure if they fixed it.
Mail gets flummoxed with large mail boxes or big commands.
Mail doesn't do a good job with their 'only grabbing headers'.
Mail (I believe) can only sort IMAP messages locally, which can be done on the server (like, before you download a few thousand messages to find the 1 you want).
Basically it went from one of the things I was most excited about in OS X to something that's constantly annoying me.
~BS
(Last edited by MrBS; Dec 5, 2003 at 09:37 PM.
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Dedicated MacNNer
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Seattle, WA
Status:
Offline
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I really like Mail. For such an old application, it has remained surprisingly well-focused and bloat-free. It could use some improvements to its Rules system, and it's been a little slow for me up until Panther came out, but overall I think it's a very solid app.
We're currently in the process of revamping three major applications. I don't know if it's really the right time to start thinking about writing a completely new one!
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Vancouver, WA
Status:
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IIRC, we're already thinking about writing a completely new app (or several), but it isn't a mail client.
As Tim2 said, most of us at Omni are happy enough with Apple Mail. Happy enough, at least, that when we consider the large investment in man-hours it takes just to make a basic mail client, it usually looks like more trouble than it's worth. Also, the "old hands" around here (every engineer but me and Tim2) remember that we wrote a mail app once before, and apparently it wasn't a very happy experience.  Not to mention that we're already competing against one free/bundled Apple product... I'm not sure we'd consider it a good business venture to compete against another.
But that's just my $.02, not an official company statement... Omni may be of a different mind in the future.
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Professional Poster
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: New York, NY
Status:
Offline
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Originally posted by MrBS:
Panther version does its hidden junk mail rule after all of your rules, so it's broken to anyone who sorts their email (and then has stop applying rules).
Or you could just create a rule for yourself that says: "If messages is junk, move to junk, stop evaluating rules" and have that be the first rule...
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cpac
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: The City Of Diamonds
Status:
Offline
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Originally posted by Sarc:
My only gripe towards Mail.app is it's crappy attachment management. It was improved a little in the panther version, but I still get problem from PC ppl. trying to open Word docs. for instance.
Yep, it drives me nuts ! I was supposed to be fixed.
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Senior User
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Austria
Status:
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Professional Poster
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: London, UK
Status:
Offline
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Originally posted by Rickster:
IIRC, we're already thinking about writing a completely new app (or several), but it isn't a mail client.
Not content with teasing us Omni-freaks in one thread, they spread it to another too...
Mark me down as another satisfied Mail user, although I truly would count myself as Mr. Average in this instance. It's always done exactly what I needed from 10.0 and has only become better with each release.
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24" iMac, 2.8Ghz Intel C2D, 4GB RAM, Mac OS X 10.5.5
15" Powerbook, 1.5GHz PPC G4, 1.5GB RAM, MacOS X 10.5.5
Please visit The Land Gallery for British Fine Art inspired by nature and landscape.
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Grizzled Veteran
Join Date: Apr 2001
Status:
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I would NOT go after this market if I were OmniGroup.
First of all, Mail.app is pretty darn good. Add to that that you have other apps (BareBones) and free app (Thunderbird) Mail is a losing area.
To be successful on the Mac OSX platform I would suggest developing applications that Apple sees as pro-sumer and not something it would/should ship with every mac. Apple likes to bundle things up, but usually stays away from things that are two complex or not a big sales across all lines.
OmniWeb is great (and I bought it and will buy OW 5.0) but if OG were to start again, in this market I would stay away from the Browsers. Pay browsers are going to have a long fight to fight.
OmniGraffle is a great example. Not much competition (so much that Apple is bundling it) tons of uses, big audience, high perceived value.
OmniOutliner is also a good one. Low price, pretty easy implementation and not too time consuming from a programming point of view. Not a ton of competition either. If they added Syncing to the Palm (memo) I would be all over it.
Now, since I have proven I know NOTHING about this market, let me bring out my suggestions for OmniGroup (remember, if you want my resume... just ask!  )
OmniGroup is very strong in UI design, in taking a common application and adding a higher level of thought to it. They are great using all of the complexities and power of OSX (Cocoa) since they have been in the business for so long.
I think OmniGroup needs a small, little $10 - $15 utility. Ambrosia does this well with iSeek and the capture utility. OG could do well to come up with a small, highly visible, very useful utility. Maybe something along the lines of plugin for one of Apples apps. Something for Mail, or iPhoto. The great thing about a small utility is you can use the software update sites, to release updates often and get more quick purchases.
I think there are a ton of little applications in the webmaster arena that could be found and built (look to windows). FTP and HTML have been nailed but CSS, bookmark management, SEP (search engine positioning), JavaScript and other areas are still open.
TyrantulaX is a great application that needs a company behind it.
http://www.animalaesthetics.com/tyrantula/
Ok... that is enough for my Sat morning monkey talk.
BZ
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