EmailEngine is an email client for apps. IMAP and SMTP are hard, so let EmailEngine handle these for you. Run REST API calls to interact with email servers and receive webhooks for changes on tracked email accounts.
With EmailEngine, you can focus on building features that matter instead of spending time rolling custom IMAP and SMTP connectivity logic.
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Based on our record, Ko-fi should be more popular than EmailEngine App. It has been mentiond 91 times since March 2021. 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.
When I started with https://emailengine.app, a similar product, I also considered releasing it as a SaaS. But looking at the competition, it seemed too complicated for me (just look at the compliance list for Nylas Email API https://www.nylas.com/security/#compliance ). Will be interesting to see how it works out for you. Good luck! - Source: Hacker News / 5 months ago
Oh, yeah, I forgot my pitch. The link is https://emailengine.app - EnailEngine acts as a mail client, basically the same way Thunderbird runs on desktop, or the iPhone Mail on phone, but instead of a GUI it has REST API and instead of desktop notifications it sends JSON webhooks. And instead of a single email account, it can manage thousands of accounts. - Source: Hacker News / about 1 year ago
Well, I for one, hope that email stays as complicated as described in the post. Otherwise my project that simplifies access to email accounts (https://emailengine.app) would get no traction :D. - Source: Hacker News / about 1 year ago
I'd like to know if anyone here can share some experience using https://emailengine.app in a larger environment, e.g. Managing / watching 100-200 email accounts and processing ~50.000-100.000 mails per day? Source: over 1 year ago
I had the same issues when I started with https://emailengine.app - just like Ghost, it’s an app written in Nodejs. I tried multiple distribution options at first and finally went with complete self containment. All modules are pre-installed during the publishing step and thus the user never needs to run npm. Or if you download the “compiled” single binary version you don’t even need node as it’s bundled with the... - Source: Hacker News / over 1 year ago
Doing necessary work. How can I sponsor or otherwise provide fiat for this work? https://buymeacoffee.com/, etc. - Source: Hacker News / 17 days ago
A few alternatives for micro donations that people have mentioned: https://ko-fi.com/ https://github.com/sponsors https://www.buymeacoffee.com/ Any others, let me know. - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
I still have to try https://ci-en.net/, https://slushe.com/, https://ko-fi.com/, https://catbox.moe/, I heard they were possible good alternatives. But I couldn't say, dunno yet. Source: 5 months ago
I did, however, remember another crowdfunding platform that may be the best of both worlds here (second highest voted so far being Patreon). Ko-fi: it offers both monthly and one-time donations as well as a store where we could sell things like early access keys or things like that. Their fees are very low as well, capping out at 5%. Source: 5 months ago
With everything going on with Patreon lately that's probably why I've suddenly started hearing about Ko-fi this year. Source: 5 months ago
The Tidelift Subscription - Pro developers get assurances. OSS maintainers get paid.
Patreon - Patreon enables fans to give ongoing support to their favorite creators.
GitHub Sponsors - Get paid to build what you love on GitHub
Buy Me A Coffee - A free, fast and friendly way to accept donations 💰
Gmail API - Flexible, RESTful access to the user's inbox
Liberapay - Liberapay is a recurrent donations platform.