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by rco8786 766 days ago
I've never used (or even seen) Teams, but I've seen the userbase graphs. Teams is killing it.

Kinda like how Apple Mail is the most popular email client. I've literally never used it and don't know anyone who does. And yet...

3 comments

I know people use it because Apple Mail generates out-of-office responses to mailing list mail (with List-Id: headers and other indicators).
If we're counting the mobile version probably everyone you know uses it.
really? literally every single person i know uses native gmail app or outlook
I use native Mail app for my gmail and yahoo accounts. Otherwise I'd have to use two apps in place of one app.

And Outlook for work, because that's what's allowed. And Slack; we don't use Teams.

my friends with yahoo use gmail client, i'm not sure how they do it
The GMail app supports IMAP because they merged the AOSP Mail client into it a couple of years ago.
Your theory is that most people who have iPhones do not actually connect their email addresses to the native mail application?
not only do most people not have iphones, but my theory is that to count as a user you have to actually use it to send or read your emails
> to count as a user you have to actually use it to send or read your emails

Yeah that's my definition as well. Pretty sure almost everyone who has an iPhone does that, at least now and then

personally i'm signed out on Mail on all my iDevices, seems to be true of most of my peers as well
Data point of one: I have never set up email on my iPhone. I very rarely read email on my phone, and I use Safari/webmail when the need arises.
So when you want to use email on your phone you first open a web browser, then navigate and sign in to your email service? I don't know anyone who does that, do you get some benefits from doing it that way (if i understood correctly)?

I will say, i use Firefox for YouTube rather than the native app, but only because Firefox extensions _infinitely_ improve the browsing and viewing experience (ad blocker, distraction blockers, subscription grouping and sorting, automatic resolution selection).

I do this on a couple of devices where I'm not logged into accounts at the device level, so app stores are not always available. I end up using the browser for most things, and it works great. The browser saves my sign-ins, and I bookmark sites like apps to make them easy to access. Works really well, dodges all the weird app stuff (app store exclusivity, permissions, app upgrades, etc.). This is all Android though, so I can add all my browser add-ons that make the web usable, which helps the overall experience tremendously.
Yes, that's what I do.

I guess there's no real benefit, I just mainly didn't want to create an email account with Apple, or connect my existing email to Apple's mothership.

frankly i don't believe Apple Mail is the most popular email client, while i do believe Teams is most popular work chat app