9to5Mac - Saturday, November 23, 2024 

The new Mail app in iOS 18.2 is nice, but I disabled one of its main 
features
 
With iOS 18.2, Apple introduced an all new Mail app. It introduced mail 
categorization, a fresh coat of paint, contact photos/business logos for 
conversations, a new system for grouping emails, and more. All of that 
sounded nice when it was unveiled back at WWDC, but now that I’ve actually 
spent some time using it, I’m having some doubts.
Mail Categorization

One of the biggest features in the new Mail app is categorization, breaking 
down your emails into varying categories of Primary, Transactions, Updates, 
and Promotions.
This all sounds nice in concept, since it’d declutter your inbox, and the 
Primary tab would contain everything that’s important. In practice though, 
a lot of things were incorrectly categorized, and I found myself swiping 
over to the “All Mail” tab most of the time, that way I could see 
everything without having to deal with inaccurate sorting.
 
And yes, you can choose to recategorize senders if you don’t like how Apple 
chose to sort it. However, I find that a bit tedious compared to simply 
turning categorization off entirely.
How to disable it

Apple thought about the fact that everyone might not necessarily like 
categorization, and provided a simple way to disable it.
Click on the three dots in the upper right hand corner of the inbox, and 
you can swap from Categories to List View. This provides an “All Mail” 
experience, while still keeping the profile pictures and other design 
elements of the new Mail app.
This setting is also inbox by inbox, so if you’d like to have 
categorization on all inboxes, but a list view for others, you can do that.
 
Priority notifications
Luckily for me, Apple already has Priority Notifications in the Mail app, 
which does a much better job at quickly highlighting what’s important, 
without me feeling like I’m potentially missing out on emails because of 
less-than-ideal categorization. This feature has definitely saved me a 
couple times. Obviously, this feature requires an Apple Intelligence 
capable device (iPhone 15 Pro, iPhone 16, iPhone 16 Pro, iPad mini 7, and 
M1 and later Macs/iPads) – but its my preferred method of seeing what’s 
important.
 
Apple will also soon be expanding Priority Notifications to all Apple 
Intelligence capable devices in a future iOS 18 release, allowing you to 
keep track of what’s most important, across all of your varying apps – not 
just mail. However, that’s not here quite yet.

Original article at:
https://9to5mac.com/2024/11/23/ios-18-2-mail-app-categorization/

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