Nylas Mail was officially sunset in August and re-licensed under MIT. Nylas is no longer maintaining Nylas Mail. Instead, check out it's successors:
Mailspring: One of the original developers is continuing Nylas Mail as Mailspring. Mailspring includes the same Pro features and a new C++ sync engine built on Mailcore2, which is faster, uses less RAM, and fixes many provider-related bugs.
Nylas Mail Lives: A group of community members forked Nylas Mail to keep it alive, accept contributions from the community and publish new releases that fix bugs and add features.
Original Post
It increasingly appears as if Nylas is basically giving up on Nylas Mail...after converting from N1 barely 2 months ago?
Anyone from Nylas, are you out there? Can you at least respond to one ticket on Github and give us a sense of whether you plan to continue developing and providing support for this product?
Update from the Maintainers
Nylas Mail was officially sunset in August and re-licensed under MIT. Nylas is no longer maintaining Nylas Mail. Instead, check out it's successors:
Mailspring: One of the original developers is continuing Nylas Mail as Mailspring. Mailspring includes the same Pro features and a new C++ sync engine built on Mailcore2, which is faster, uses less RAM, and fixes many provider-related bugs.
Nylas Mail Lives: A group of community members forked Nylas Mail to keep it alive, accept contributions from the community and publish new releases that fix bugs and add features.
Original Post
It increasingly appears as if Nylas is basically giving up on Nylas Mail...after converting from N1 barely 2 months ago?
Anyone from Nylas, are you out there? Can you at least respond to one ticket on Github and give us a sense of whether you plan to continue developing and providing support for this product?