Subscription email app Tempo hits the right minimalist notes

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Email will likely never die, but if new apps can change how we think about using it, maybe it will feel like the worst parts have croaked.In
fills the void
reply to emails at all.The radical design decisions were originally made to organize around the idea that being a slave to notifications was
bad for productivity and that email was never meant to be an ever-present life blood
Over time, the app has become more appealing to a general user, but as the company prepares to launch their mobile app, they are trying to
Stockmarr says
some of its intricacies
your focus
Workplace toolsets are so often about sending you mixed signals that drag you out of deep work
let your more trivial emails fade while you get to your other work.The fundamental difference between the two apps is that Superhuman has
optimized for users to get in and out of the app quickly so they can stay current, but Tempo is more focused on you settling into the app
but using it less per day
useful feature of Superhuman was splitting the inbox into messages that were sent only to you and ones that are more likely to be spam or
low-priority
and gives you the option to archive it, delete it, send it to the workspace or pound out a quick reply
Combining a getting-things-done interface with your inbox makes a lot of sense, given how parallel the mantras of GTD and inbox-zero are
are only sent a desktop notification or two per day letting you know that you have emails to check
You can schedule when these arrive and it encourages you to not be afraid to let a few emails build up in your inbox rather than obsessively
and the occasional beta bugginess, but it seems to help me be healthier about email without feeling too preachy
feel about their relationship with email versus how it makes their credit card feel.