![]() ![]() ![]() This can be a little disconcerting at first, and if you prefer your email in a more, well, email-y format, Spike isn’t for you. Tap on any specific email, and it appears in a more traditional format. All of the other information (except the message, of course) remains hidden. Its email threads are presented in bubbles, similar to Slack or Facebook Messenger, with the subject of the conversation at top of the page and only the names and icons of the senders immediately visible. Spike is available as a web app and as a macOS, Windows, iOS, or Android app. (I look forward to trying out June.ai as well in the near future.) It hopes to distinguish itself by presenting emails as chats. ![]() The Verge’s Chaim Gartenberg is enthusiastic about Spark, which recently added an Android app, so I thought I’d take a look at Spike, once known as Hop. Google’s email app, Inbox, (along with Google+) has gone to that great Google trashcan in the sky, but there are a number of apps out there that are eager to fill the gap, such as Spark, June.ai, and Spike.
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