App of the Week – EasilyDo Email

Published On May 30, 2016 | By Tom Huskerson | App of the Week

easily doWe all know how difficult managing our email can be. Especially when you have tons of mass emails flooding your inbox, or inboxes. Mass emails are the primary tool of marketers, political parties, charities and many other groups trying to get your attention. There is a word for this, its called spam. That is why EasilyDo Email is the App of the Week.

EasilyDo Email for Apple devices takes the effort out of unsubscribing from mass email messages, or spam, you have no interest in. Just tap the menu icon in the top-left corner of the inbox. Under the ‘Assistant’ option sits a tab for ‘Subscriptions.’ There you will see a list of current email subscriptions. Beside each on you will find an ‘x’ box. Just tap the box and kiss mass email bon voyage.

You have the option of changing your mind with the undo option that appears immediately but quickly disappears a few seconds later. Unsubscribed email appears at the bottom of your subscriptions list, grayed out for reference.

Lets face it, we all get those emails and ask ourselves; where did that come from? Or how did they get my email address? The answer is simple, there is a massive email market that buys and sells email addresses by the millions. No matter how many emails you unsubscribe from there is always another list out there.

Easily Do Email claims to be better at searching for messages than Apple’s default Mail iOS app by searching deeper and faster into your email archive. It also offers an ‘Assistant’ feature that  lets you quickly see a listing of all your travel-related email arranged by the next upcoming travel and followed by email related to previous trips.

EasilyDo Email’s ‘Packages,’ ‘Bills & Receipts,’ and ‘Entertainment’ assistants work in similar manner but not exactly the same. The Entertainment assistant provides notifications for all pending or past events, theater tickets, OpenTable reservations, and more, but it does not segment the alerts into past or future sections.

Email is currently only available for Apple  but does not work on iPad. Hey nobody’s perfect!

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About The Author

Tom Huskerson Bio Born in Richmond Virginia Tom Huskerson is a military veteran who settled in California after his discharge. Tom attended Santa Barbara City College where he began his writing career as a campus reporter. He worked as an intern news reporter for the Santa Barbara News-Press writing feature stories before moving on to San Francisco. At San Francisco State University Tom studied broadcast communications and began to focus on the Internet. He completed his graduate thesis on Internet advertising. Tom was the first student to ever focus on the Internet as a graduate student at San Francisco State University. After graduation he went to work for Zona Research in California’s Silicone Valley. As a research associate Tom supported senior analyst writing on the latest developments in the Internet industry. During the dot com boom Tom worked for several web businesses as a market researcher and analyst. As a writer and researcher Tom has authored various technical works including a training program for Charles Schwab security. Other projects included professional presentations on workplace violence and hiring security contractors. Tom has also written both fiction and non-fiction works and blogging for a travel website. He has published two books of short stories and completed two novels. Tom is the owner of Scribe of Life Literature and EbonyCandle.com. Tom is not the chief editor for the OnTechStreet. com. A news and information blog that focuses on tech news for African-Americans. The blog is the result of his desire to inform the African American community of the dangers and benefits of the cyber age. In his blog Tom reports on information security, new and analysis, scams and hoaxes, legal happenings and various topics that arise from the age of information. Tom believes that technology is a necessary tool for black people and they should know what is happening. Tom writes believing that techno speak is for the professional and that valuable information can be communicated using plain language. As a result he has embraced the motto, Less Tech, More Knowledge.

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