Email And Calendar App For Mac 2018

Astro is the latest email app to add a built-in calendar so that you can flip directly between your inbox and a list of your upcoming events. But for Astro, the addition could eventually be even. In 2018, Mail is a seriously great email app, you can delete it if you want, and the App Store is awash in alternative email applications. Now, of course, the challenge is to find the best email app for your iPhone needs. The app also has solid task and event management, which syncs easily with the built in iOS calendar app, Reminders, and Google Calendar for easy event importing.

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Once you get all of your accounts setup in the app, you can start viewing and managing your email with the Windows 10 Mail app. Figure E is an example of what it might look like. Figure E The. The Mail and Calendar apps help you stay up to date on your email, manage your schedule and stay in touch with people you care about the most. Designed for both work and home, these apps help you communicate quickly and focus on what’s important across all your accounts. Fantastical 2 is a workhorse of a calendar app that can connect to your iCloud, Exchange, Google, Yahoo, fruux, and CalDAV accounts. It then imports all of your daily event information into one unified calendar, which can be displayed as a full month along with daily, weekly, or yearly options. The app also has solid task and event management, which syncs easily with the built in iOS calendar app, Reminders, and Google Calendar for easy event importing.

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Resource-draining currency miners are a regular part of the Google Play market, as scammers pump out apps that covertly harness millions of devices, in some cases with malware so aggressive it can physically damage phones. A popular title in the Mac App Store recently embraced coin mining openly, and so far Apple gatekeepers haven't blocked it.

The app is Calendar 2, a scheduling app that aims to include more features than the Calendar app that Apple bundles with macOS. In recent days, Calendar 2 developer Qbix endowed it with code that mines the digital coin known as Monero. The xmr-stack miner isn't supposed to run unless users specifically approve it in a dialog that says the mining will be in exchange for turning on a set of premium features. If users approve the arrangement, the miner will then run. Users can bypass this default action by selecting an option to keep the premium features turned off or to pay a fee to turn on the premium features.

Feels like the first time

If Calendar 2 isn't the first known app offered in Apple's official and highly exclusive App Store to do currency mining, it's one of the very few. The discovery comes as sky-high valuations have pushed the limits of currency mining and led to a surge of websites and malware that surreptitiously mine digital coins on mobile devices, personal computers, and business servers. Calendar 2 is slightly different in the sense that it clearly discloses the miner it runs by default. That puts it in a grayer zone than most of the miners seen to date.

'On the one hand, using the user's CPU for cryptomining has become extremely unpopular,' Thomas Reed, director of Mac offerings at antimalware provider Malwarebytes, told Ars. 'The fact that this is the default is something I don't like. I would want to see a legit app informing the user in advance or making it an option that can be turned on but is off by default. On the other hand, they [the developers] do disclose that they are doing it and give other options for people who don't like it. My personal feeling on this is that, given the disclosure, I think the user should be allowed to make their own choice. Some people might be perfectly willing to let an app like this mine cryptocurrency so that they can use it for free.'

Apple representatives didn't respond to emails asking if the recently updated Calendar 2 violated App Store terms and services. Almost 24 hours after Ars alerted them to app, it remained available for download. Patrick Wardle, a researcher specializing in macOS security, has a detailed analysis of the miner here.

In an email, Qbix founder Gregory Magarshak said the rollout of the currency miner has been complicated by two bugs that prevented it from working as intended. The first flaw caused the miner to run indefinitely, even when users changed the default setting. The second bug caused the miner to consume more resources than planned. Developers programmed the miner to use 10 percent to 20 percent of a Mac's computing power, depending on whether the machine was plugged in. The new miner has been using much higher percentages.

App

Magarshak wrote:

In short, as you can imagine, these two bugs caused issues for many of our users. We got a lot of messages saying 'I love your app and used it for many years, but this version is kicking my computer into overdrive! Please fix it ASAP.' (Paraphrased.) And so forth. What started out as a well-meaning option to just let people try out a new way to get all features unlocked became an option that made many people associate 'mining' with huge CPU consumption.

Email And Calendar App

The miner—or at least the bugs found in the one released—has generated plenty of criticism on social media.

@SGgrc@QbixApps Calendar 2 for Mac (from the App Store) launched a cryptocurrency miner without my permission. Then it ate 200% CPU until I found it and killed it. I didn't expect a miner infection from an App Store vendor. Wow. It runs the xmr-stak Monero miner.

— Fred Laxton (@fredonline) March 12, 2018

Qbix is in the process of publishing an update to fix the bugs. Magarshak went on to note that he has long criticized what he says is an 'arms race to waste electricity to solve hashes.' Such arms races are created by currency mining based on what's known as 'proof of work' computing. He said he's considering removing the miner altogether from Calendar 2. For now, it's still there, and there's no indication Apple has any plans to change that.

Update: In an e-mail sent about 90 minutes after this post went live, Magarshak said he has decided to remove the miner from future versions of Calandar 2. He explained:

We have decided to REMOVE the miner in the app. The next version will remove the option to get free features via mining. This is for three reasons:

1) The company which provided us the miner library did not disclose its source code, and it would take too long for them to fix the root cause of the CPU issue.

2) The rollout had a perfect storm of bugs which made it seem like our company *wanted* to mine crypto-currency without people's permission, and that goes against our whole ethos and vision for Qbix.

Email And Calendar App For Mac 2018 Update

3) My own personal feeling that Proof of Work has a dangerous set of incentives which can lead to electricity waste on a global scale we've never seen before. We don't want to get sucked into this set of incentives, and hopefully our decision to ultimately remove the miner will set some sort of precedent for other apps as well.

Ultimately, even though we technically could have remedied the situation and continued on benefiting from the pretty large income such a miner generates, we took the above as a sign that we should get out of the 'mining business' before we get sucked into the Proof of Work morass of incentives.

Apple representatives have yet to return requests for comment.

Microsoft Windows 10 comes with new versions of the free Mail and Calendar apps. While the apps don't include all of the features of Outlook, they do their jobs, and they do it well. This is especially true because of their native Windows 10 ability to display real time information from the tiles on the Start Screen.

Setting them up isn't difficult, but it does take a few steps, so let's walk through them.

Mail

Click the Start Button or press the Windows Key to get the Start Screen. It should look similar to Figure B. The Mail and Calendar apps are at the top of my tiles.

Figure B

Go to the Start Screen.

Click the Mail tile to start the app, where you can begin the setup process by pressing the Get Started button (Figure C).

Figure C

Press the Get Started button.

If you're logged into your Microsoft account, the app should already have your outlook.com email address in the list. Click the plus sign [+] to add additional mail accounts (Figure D). In my case, I have a Gmail account and an account for my personal website (markwkaelin.com) run through Office 365.

Figure D

You can add mail accounts.

As you add each account, you will be asked to accept the privacy requirements necessary to establish a connection. If you're connecting to an account managed by Microsoft Exchange, you may have to accept enhanced security policies required by that server.

Once you get all of your accounts setup in the app, you can start viewing and managing your email with the Windows 10 Mail app. Figure E is an example of what it might look like.

Figure E

The Windows 10 Mail app.

Calendar

Figure F shows you one of the nice features of Windows 10. When we set up our accounts for the Mail app, the information transferred automatically to the Calendar app, so our accounts are already connected, and we're ready to go.

Figure F

Information is automatically transferred to the Calendar app.

As you can see in Figure G, I organize my calendar using color coding. I like how the Calendar app merges all of the calendars together in one place and maintained my color scheme, for the most part (more pink than usual). I may have found my new default calendar app.

Figure G

You can organize your calendar using color coding.

Complimentary apps

If you take a closer look at Figure G, you can see that some of my calendar events are listed twice. This is because I subscribe to a service called Oggsync that synchronizes my Outlook Calendar and my Google Calendar. It works great and has served me well these past two years.

However, with the Windows 10 Calendar app, I just might be able to eliminate that annual expense. Combine this with the live tile feature (Figure H) and you have a very useful and free app that can consolidate all of your email and calendar events into one place.

Figure H

The Windows 10 live tile feature.

Your thoughts

Have you tried the new Windows 10 Mail and Calendar apps? Did you dismiss them before even giving them a chance? As I have shown you, that is a mistake. Give these free apps a try, and let us know what you think in the discussion thread below.

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