When comparing Canary Mail vs GyazMail, the Slant community recommends GyazMail for most people. In the question“What are the best e-mail clients for macOS?” GyazMail is ranked 6th while Canary Mail is ranked 7th. The most important reason people chose GyazMail is:
Goichi Hirakawa, the main developer of GyazMail, has been committed to his project since 2003 and delivers updates regularly.
Specs
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Pros
Pro Multiple Signatures for Multiple Accounts including ALIASES
You can assign your default signature to an ALIAS for the same account or create an altogether new one.
Pro No personal data stored on servers
No access tokens, passwords, attachments or email itself is stored on Canary servers.
Pro Seamlessly integrates with iOS verion
Gone are the days of manual setup of phone email clients! Canary Mail syncs not just your accounts but all of your settings and even signatures on iCloud.
Pro Local email database is encrypted on disk
Canary stores your local email database encrypted.
Pro Gorgeous and intuitive
Pro Pretty Good Privacy or PGP built-in
Pro Long term support and development
Goichi Hirakawa, the main developer of GyazMail, has been committed to his project since 2003 and delivers updates regularly.
Pro Mail sorting rules
The user can define complex mail sorting rules for incoming and outgoing mail.
Pro 64-bit support
As of v1.6
Pro Native Cocoa API based
GyazMail is a native macOS application, based on the Cocoa API.
Pro customizable fonts & colors
the mailbox view is very comfortable
Pro Very good support for Asian languages
GyazMail is a Japanese product, so it has very good support for Asian languages.
Pro Supports older versions of macOS
GyazMail is available for all versions of Mac OS X / macOS starting with version 10.1
Pro Freely selectable hard line wrap
In GyazMail you can set a maximum number of characters per line. The program will wrap the lines using hard wrapping on sending. This feature is very useful for newsgroups that require a hard break after 72 characters.
Pro Supports a big variety of character encodings
Uses Oniguruma regular expression library, which is a very elaborate regular expression engine that supports a big variety of character encodings. This makes very much sense with e-mail, as in an e-mail theoretically any character encoding could be used. Because it is free software (BSD), written in C, very elaborate, stable and still actively maintained it is also used in Atom, Take Command Console, Tera Term, TextMate, Sublime Text, SubEthaEdit, and jq.
Cons
Con Missing mainstream features
No functionality for user-defined Gmail message-tagging, or moving/copying to IMAP folders. Might be acceptable in a free app, but not in one with premium pricing.
Con Buggy
It adds random pins to old emails which then stay on top of the inbox list
Con Poor handling of new emails
You sometimes need to wait very long before your email actually gets delivered.
Con Windows moves randomly
When you create a new email, the new windows is often misplaced so that you have to move it to reach the "Send" button.
Con Poor text editing capabilities
The cursor is laggy so you're better off using keyboard shortcuts.
Con Show NO show
It'll show a new email on a counter, but you're not able to view them.
Con Looks old and outdated
Con If connection drops or times out, Gyazmail just sits there until you click OK button
Con Cannot remove attachments to save space
Con Still a 32-Bit app
