MailCarrier is an open-source, self-hosted platform to design emails thanks to a powerful template engine, send them through a powerful APIs and collect logs of already sent emails. It ships with authorization out-of-the-box, all powered by Laravel.
Design emails once, send them everywhere
MailCarrier is an open-source, self-hosted platform to design emails thanks to a powerful template engine, send them through a powerful APIs and collect logs of already sent emails. It ships with authorization out-of-the-box, all powered by Laravel.
Hey y'all 👋 MailCarrier was born out of a real need for our company: to centralise our email templates, send them easily and see the historical logs, but WITHOUT tying our needs to a 3rd party marketing email tool. What MailCarrier can offer: • 🎨 Beautiful syntax: Explore a beautiful, expressive template syntax similar to JS thanks to Twig by Symfony • 🧩 Provider aware: Use the provider of your choice to send email, such as Amazon SES, MailGun, SendGrid, etc. • ✨ Friendly APIs: Use a friendly an
MailCarrier is a game-changer! The fact that it was born out of a real need within your own company speaks volumes about its practicality and effectiveness. I love that it offers a beautiful syntax with Twig by Symfony, making template creation a breeze. The flexibility to use any email provider of choice is fantastic, and the well-documented API endpoint is a major plus. The emphasis on security and attachments is reassuring. The roadmap features like integrating MJML framework and custom tags
Email marketing will become easier and easier thanks to tools like this, haha Congrats on the launch 🚀
Looks really helpful! Congrats on the launch
Congrats for the MailCarrier launch!🚀 I can see all the hard work that went into and you guys nailed it! Really great job 👏🤞
A measure of community engagement at launch. Higher means more people noticed and interacted with the product. It's a traction signal, not a quality rating.
Discussion threads divided by interest score. Above 0.30 is strong. Below 0.15 suggests the product got clicks but not conversation.
Categories come from the product's launch tags. Most products appear in 2-3 categories. The primary category is listed first.
The scores reflect launch-period engagement. Historical data is preserved and doesn't change retroactively. The build date at the bottom shows when the index was last refreshed.