Posteo is only 12€ a year, so a bit cheaper. Doesn’t support custom domains though.
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Posteo is only 12€ a year, so a bit cheaper. Doesn’t support custom domains though.
I was honestly hoping it would be an actual fork 😅
Mint could use some forks, like a KDE version. That’d be sweet.
There’s very good reasons that app developers focus on flatpaks, which mostly revolves around how incredibly terrible the experience is creating native packages for each distro and each release version of those various distros.
Flatpak used to be problematic, but even a loud hater of Flatpak, Richard Brown of openSUSE, now lauds Flatpak as an excellent solution after his criticisms were addressed.
Voyager thankfully does also have this feature. If you go to a community and press on the little icon at the top right, next to the 3 little dots, you’ll open the ‘sort by’ menu. If you press the ‘Top’ option, it will then let you choose between those different time options.
Don’t we already have that feature? I can choose to see the top posts of a community by hour, six hours, 12 hours, day, week, month, and so on, up to a year by clicking the sort type drop down menu on any community.
Do you mean be able to see the top posts between two different times, like top posts between 2022 and 2023?
Tuta and Posteo are both pretty excellent (posteo is cheaper, but has a few less options that might be a deal breaker if you need them, like custom domain support).
Disroot is a good free option, and they offer custom domains after a one time donation.
Mailbox is okay, though they are known to have a very odd 2fa, and will recycle your address if you ever stop paying, allowing others to claim it and potentially impersonate you.
Posteo is unique in that they’ll never delete your account for inactivity, or even if you stop paying, where they’ll let you access and read emails, but not let you send them until you pay again.
Edit: apparently Tuta is going downhill according to others here, which is unfortunate :(
The biggest advantage of private email is that it stops the email provider itself from data mining some of your most sensitive info, as Gmail and other free emails most certainly do. Basically it’s protection from surveillance capitalism, but you rightfully can’t consider it a secure way to send messages or info to other, non-encrypted users.