

- #MAILSPRING GITHUB FULL#
- #MAILSPRING GITHUB SOFTWARE#
- #MAILSPRING GITHUB CODE#
- #MAILSPRING GITHUB FREE#
| +- :spring-boot:jar:2.1.2.RELEASE:compile +- :spring-boot-starter:jar:2.1.2.RELEASE:compile Even if you aren’t successful, or the fix isn’t ideal, the attempt still helps us!Īnd, of course, you can help just by being involved in the community: helping answer questions, triage bugs, and discuss features takes pressure off the developers, so they have time to focus on writing awesome :spring-boot-send-email:jar:1.0

#MAILSPRING GITHUB CODE#
If you know anything about coding - even a little - you can check out the Mailspring source code from GitHub and try to fix the bug or implement the feature yourself.

If you see similar bug reports, possible duplicates, or other posts with hints, helping get those individuals involved in diagnostics helps a lot! Checking logs, testing out scenarios, or even digging around in the code if you’re up to the challenge all help move towards a resolution. If you want to help get a bug resolved or feature implemented quicker, here’s some things you can do, depending on your available time and skills:
#MAILSPRING GITHUB FULL#
Mailspring is built and maintained by volunteers - even the core developer does this in addition to a full time job.Īs a rule, asking for updates, status, or timeframe won’t hurry things along. If there are none posted, there are no updates. To me, it is mind blowing that this is a one man side project at all, so a big kudos to !! I am very impressed and excited to give it a try.Īs a rule, all updates will be posted on the thread.
#MAILSPRING GITHUB SOFTWARE#
Thanks for the explanation Jason, and I completely appreciate the sentiment!! I agree software developers are often underappreciated, especially OSS. Are there any ways that we, as a community, can help push this along? I didn’t realize there was a preview to this feature yet so I guess I’ll try that next and provide some feedback but I just wanted to ask if there might be some other way we can help. For this reason, I am stuck unable to accept calendar invites that are sent to any address outside of won’t go into any more details but basically I’m desperately looking for a good replacement. Up until now Thunderbird has been great with the third party Google Provider for TB extension, but the latest version broke calendar invites through email and introduced a bug where dismissing notifications removes all invited parties. Evolution is bloated and not a great solution for anyone not using Gnome. I think the need for a combination email and calendar system on Linux has become more urgent recently.
#MAILSPRING GITHUB FREE#
That will free up Ben to implement these larger features, such as the Calendar. If you’d like to help things along, consider helping us fix some of the bugs, especially urgent ones. There is nothing about Mailspring that is simple and easy. I can determine the most urgent bugs and highest demand features, with an eye towards the actual development effort involved.Īll that to say, patience - yes, even years of it - is more than warranted. That’s why I was brought on as the Volunteer Community Manager. Software development is time-intensive at best, and Mailspring is a particularly complicated project. Over the last couple of years especially, the sheer mass of the issue list on GitHub - much of which consists of questions, minor edge-case bugs, duplicate issues, and wishlist feature requests - has made it difficult to find and focus efforts on the most urgent bugs and features, especially given limited development time. Historically, Mailspring has just one developer ( who works on this project in addition to a full-time job. (There’s even another feature slated for this year that has been more in-demand than the Calendar, so that has to come first!) That’s been the case for some time as you can imagine, the stability and usability of existing features is more important than adding new features. I say “hopefully” because there are a lot of major bugfixes and stability upgrades that have to be done this year, and that may potentially push back the Calendar.
