![]() I've tried looking up some apps on the play store, but I haven't downloaded any because of the reviews. The solutions proposed in articles I've found on Android 9 but a different phone or on different versions of Android have not worked for me. I wasn't able to find any articles specifically on Android 9 and Samsung Galaxy S9. ![]() Joined Messages 58 Reaction score 1 Points 8 Location Ashford Your Macs Specs Mac Mini G4 1.25ghz 1gb Ram 1 Id be surprised if this hasnt been bought up before, but I couldnt find it on the search. Question: How do I see number or existence of unread messages on icons of apps such as viber and whatsapp and the SMS app? Apart from Growl notifications, new mail alerts ring in with a chime and the unread mail count is displayed on the dock icon and the menu bar. If I get a message on whatsapp or viber or regular SMS but say I have to install some updates and so my phone has to turn off or restart, then the notification of this message is gone. My situation: I do not have such number or dot on icons on apps on my device. Sparrow has come a long way since its beta days and now supports all IMAP accounts including Gmail, MobileMe, Yahoo and custom IMAP.My device: I use Android 9 on samsung galaxy s9.īackground: I believe there was a feature before (or maybe currently still, but I turned it off) about showing number of unread messages on apps like whatsapp, viber or the SMS app (and i guess gmail or facebook) or at the very least there's some kind of dot or something on a corner of the icon of such an app that indicates there exists at least 1 unread message (so the dot is an alternative to a specific number of unread messages). To see badges for all emails in your inbox, choose Whole Inbox. To see badges only for unread emails, choose New Messages Only. Tick Enable dock icon badge Select one of the options in the Dock count section. It's intended as replacement for the retiring Quick Links lab feature. Click Spark at the top left of your screen Select Settings > Notifications > Badges. You can then navigate to those bookmarks via 'Mail > Go to > Navigate.'. Sparrow features a three-column layout with accounts occupying the narrow left column, your list of emails in the middle column and mail content filling up the last one. Mailplane 3.7.0 Bookmarks (a.k.a Quick Links) Use 'Mail > Go to > Add Bookmark.' to save frequent searches or links to individual messages in Gmail. Sparrow retains the minimal ‘Tweetie look’ by having a collapsible third column. ![]() The minimal look generated a lot of buzz during the beta days and is still a strong selling point of the app. Moreover, it switches between multiple accounts the same way, but that’s pretty much all the inspiration it takes from Tweetie. If you’re a Gmail addict you’d know there is hardly a native app for Mac that provides the same level of functionality as the web app. I’m not counting Mailplane in here as it is essentially a wrapper around the web view itself. Sparrow set out to put things in order and with the latest update it has moved closer to replacing Mailplane as the default mail client on my Mac. The first point update added support for Gmail labels, priority inbox and keyboard shortcuts. Gmail labels and folders can be edited straight from within Sparrow, helping you keep your inbox neat and tidy. Apply Control + click on the temporary icon of running application and select the option ‘Keep in Dock’. Method 2: When you open the application, a temporary icon will appear on the Dock. Method 1: Just drag the application from the Finder and place it in the application section of the Dock. The only small glitch that I encountered while using the app is that Gmail label colors aren’t synched over and if you’re used to color coded messages, then it would take some time to set things right by editing the label colors manually. The icons can be added to this section in two ways. Sparrow v1.2 came with a slew of new features that included unified inbox, threading by subject and Facebook integration, bolstering its strong feature set. Unified inbox was Sparrow’s much awaited feature and now with its inception you can browse emails from multiple inboxes under a single roof. Sparrow claims to be the world’s first social email client by adding Facebook integration. Simply punch in your Facebook account details to populate the mailbox with profile pictures of your Facebook friends to make identification easier and make your inbox look prettier. Although the Facebook integration is nice and innovative, I absolutely love the way conversations feature has been implemented. It neatly bundles the message history while showing only the latest message in the conversation. The bundle is sorted chronologically displaying the timestamp corresponding to each message.
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