![]() Today I received an email from them that the bug was in fact fixed and to test it. They replied and said the devs were able to isolate the problem and it would be fixed. I sent support an email, they quickly replied with instructions on how to help them track down the bug (screenshots, how to do log report, etc). This makes it hard to fly through spam control and save important emails for later. ![]() The way it automatically sorts them, not only by my multiple email accounts, but also by type (ie, people, notifications, newsletters, pins, seen, etc) makes it easy for me to get done what needs to be done.Īt one point I dropped it down to 4 stars because of an annoying bug where there were blank spots in my email list on the left and I had no idea if emails were being deleted or moved to “seen” or what happened to them. I prefer to sort through email with Spark on my iPad than through any other method (various apps across all my Apple devices). Spark has been my go-to iPad app for years. It’s almost certainly a multi-client synchronization bug of some type. Avoiding using Spark on iOS while it is open on macOS also seems to help, as does avoiding using Spark on multiple devices altogether. However, religiously forcing synchronization doesn’t make the problem go away entirely. The bug appears to be correlated with having multiple devices running Spark and possibly taking Spark out of the foreground on iOS or closing it on macOS without first forcing a synchronization. Spark typically works well enough and often enough that my periodic reviews of potentially less buggy alternatives always lead me back to Spark, but the continuing snooze bugs are very, very frustrating. The latter is particularly bad, as there’s no way to know when this happens other than to keep the inbox empty or to remember everything that was snoozed and to notice when emails don’t reappear on schedule if I could do that, I wouldn’t need snooze in the first place. Now, snoozed items randomly appear at the top of the inbox immediately after being snoozed, labeled with their correct snooze date, or randomly appear in the inbox based on their original unsnoozed date with no indication they were ever snoozed. In prior versions, large numbers of snoozed items would lose their snooze date and revert to “someday”, forcing a periodic review of the snoozed folder to ensure nothing had gone AWOL.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |