No issues with email deliverability so far, and very cost effective. There is also usage-based billing which starts at 4$/year and should end up cheaper than the flat rate for most use cases. No extra cost per domain and scriptable email routing. The admin panel doesn't look very modern, but works well. Has TOTP and FIDO 2FA support.
Based on our record, Purelymail seems to be a lot more popular than Kanmail. While we know about 50 links to Purelymail, we've tracked only 4 mentions of Kanmail. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I’ve gone through this process for my email client Kanmail [1]. The third party audit is not required for email clients that run on end users computers and store credentials locally. By the looks of it Pegasus falls into this category and should not have any issues getting approved (still need the YT video and such but the Google team are surprisingly responsive and helpful in my experience). [1]... - Source: Hacker News / about 2 years ago
I’m building a desktop email client [0] that has $45 lifetime licenses. Made to scratch my own itch I’ve been using it as my only client for 4 years now, barely makes any money though! [0] https://kanmail.io. - Source: Hacker News / over 2 years ago
I use pyinstaller for my Kanmail email client [1] and it’s fantastic, but at creating Mac app bundles or Windows exes. Tried making actual standalone binaries for another project and, as others have mentioned, they’re incredibly slow to startup. Still, I am a huge fan of the project and it makes it possible to make webview desktop “apps” (like or hate them) with Python. [1] https://kanmail.io. - Source: Hacker News / over 2 years ago
There's pywebview (https://github.com/r0x0r/pywebview/) which is a Python lib that uses whatever native webview implementation exists. Obviously means some compatibility work between each OS, but gives out very small apps what work very well on the whole. I'm using it on my cross platform email client (https://kanmail.io). - Source: Hacker News / almost 3 years ago
I'm really pleased with Purelymail so far. It's very minimalistic, reliable (I can't remember if I've ever had any sort of downtime at all!), and dirt cheap: $10/yr if you're on simple pricing, and usually even less if you pay for usage (my usual monthly bill is around 50¢, give or take, so something like $6/yr). https://purelymail.com/. - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
Https://purelymail.com/ https://mxroute.com/ https://www.vfemail.net/ https://runbox.com/ I know this because I have spent time looking the past week for getting off Outlook.com. I've basically settled on Runbox.com as it seems to be the most established and stable. - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
I pay for Purelymail. Base price is $4 a year and then you pay for usage. Or you can pay $10 a year and not worry about paying for usage. Unlimited domains and users, although it is rather clunky to setup. Source: 11 months ago
I just discovered purelymail.com but am still testing it myself. It seems like the developer is very eager to improve his product and has the absolut best pricing I know of. Source: 11 months ago
You might be able to configure SPF and DKIM to mostly work with Cloudflare as receiving MX and your other mailbox elsewhere spoofing outbound messages, but I think such a setup will be unavoidably fragile. I'd look into something like Purelymail, personally (and when it looked like the free-tier Workspace was going to be nuked for personal users, that was my backup plan). Source: 12 months ago
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