![]() It uses several technologies, like symmetric-key cryptography and public-key cryptography to achieve this. This stands for Pretty Good Privacy, and it’s an encryption scheme that lets you send and receive encrypted email. The feature that stood out the most to me, and what Canary markets, is PGP. The integrations with third-party services is nice, but I’ve never sent a GIF from Giphy in an email before, so that personally wasn’t important to me. If you routinely provide the same response to emails, you can save it as a template so you don’t have to type it out every time. I find this especially handy when managing emails from multiple accounts.Ī feature I haven’t seen in any other email app is email templates. You can perform bulk actions on these like archiving, deleting, or moving to another folder. The app’s algorithms then try to find the emails that it thinks are likely to be unimportant. With the Bulk Cleaner, you can tap on a wand icon. Canary also includes what it calls “intelligent typography enhancements ensure optimum readability.” With the Focused Inbox feature, the app tries to put what it thinks are the most important emails first. I can type “PDFs from Bob last week” or “emails last month” and the app provides the relevant emails. Searching for emails and email attachments using natural language is intuitive. You don’t have to wonder if your recipient read your email anymore. This lets you know when your email has been opened. Another feature I thought was handy: read receipts. Gmail, iCloud Mail, Office 365, and Yahoo email accounts are all supported. ![]() ![]()
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