


The service, which has a free and paid-for options up to $14.99 per month on the Web, brings much of its Web-functionality to Android including the ability to schedule messages to send later, ‘snooze’ messages – that is, return them to the top of your inbox at a later date, or to schedule follow-up reminders about certain emails.Īnd like its desktop counterpart, Boomerang’s integration into Gmail on Android is all-but seamless, retaining most of the core functionality of Gmail, such as being able to star, label and archive messages, as well as automatically working with all your synced Gmail accounts, providing you authorize them. We have wanted a first-rate mobile experience to complement our desktop offering for quite some time we now have the resources and bandwidth to make a fully featured and well thought out mobile client,” Aye Moah, Chief of Product at Baydin, told The Next Web. “Over the past few years, it’s no surprise to anyone that the amount of our email we handle on mobile devices has increased dramatically. The service known as Boomerang for Gmail has been helping people organize and keep track of the most important mail in their inbox for a while now, and while the site plays nicely on all the major mobile operating systems the folks behind the service thought it high-time that it had its first own native app. Baydin, the company behind the Boomerang for Gmail service on the Web, has released its first native app today – and it’s only available on Android.
