superaorta posted on Thu, 23 Aug 2018 22:05:35 +0100 as excerpted: > - If you know if clementine or another kmail replacement is around that > would be great. > Basically _anything_ to get my email working as it should be. > > Akoanadi is the bane of my computing life and trying to get bugs fixed > is, well pointless. I hope someone is working on something better for > the next version of kde! Let's just say that I'm no akonadi fan either, and that I found reason enough to leave it behind some time ago. No point in beating a dead horse, as they say... One very wholehearted recommendation of what I ended up switching to, and another that I considered... 1) I ended up switching to (gtk-based) claws-mail here, and love it. One feature stressed heavily is claws' heavy configurability and scriptable expansibility, with a page on the claws site making available various user-submitted scripts. That means they're extremely unlikely to jump the database shark that kmail did with akonadi, because it would kill scriptability, a major reason claws-mail exists. Hotkeys are configurable and all functionality is exposed for hotkey configuration. Many features, including the tray icon functionality (which works well here!), are actually supported via plugins. Claws doesn't support HTML mail composition as its users don't tend to want it, but it does support reading HTML mail, including the mode I use, which rather than actually parsing the HTML, simply converts HTML/XML to standard text impressively well, well enough that I use it for following my RSS/Atom feeds (which are fetched and presented in claws using another plugin). The biggest down side I've found is that it's single-threaded and its dialogs tend to be modal, so you have to close them in ordered to continue working in the main window, and it'll check mail addresses (if you have more than one) only one at a time. (By contrast, my gtk-based news/nntp client, pan, uses modeless dialogs for pretty much everything; so I can switch between the main window and various dialogs without closing any of them. I'm active on the pan list and that's handy when referring to them in a reply to a question, for instance. And it multi- threads parallel downloading and uploading using multiple connections to/ from multiple servers at once, but it does nntp, not mail, and not feeds either, so I need claws as well.) But I don't use claws with imap, so while I know it supports it, I can't honestly say how well it works in that regard. https://www.claws-mail.org/ , and should a reasonably mature version in most distro repos. 2) Trojita is a qt5-based imap (not pop3, the reason I didn't try it) mail client that while pure qt (no kde deps) is now developed under the kde umbrella. I'm acquainted with the original developer (he was a gentoo dev at the time and I'm a gentooer) and find it quite interesting, but at the time I switched I needed a POP3 client and trojita does only imap, not pop3, so unfortunately it wouldn't have worked for me and I've never had a chance to try it. But I suppose gmail is accessible via imap, so it should work for you, and because trojita is designed for speed on large imap folders, it could work quite well with gmail. Because it's qt-based it should integrate better with kde/plasma than the gtk-based claws-mail, but as I've not used it I've no idea whether it has a tray icon. http://trojita.flaska.net/ , and is in some distro repos but may not be in all of them yet, and may be outdated in others, a potentially big issue as it's only a few years old so if it's a few years outdated it could be a pretty early version... Let me know if you have questions about claws, and if you try trojita, how it works (or not) for you. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman