Apple launches Apple Store app in India

The Apple Store app provides customers with the most personalized way to shop for Apple’s innovative lineup of products and services. Learn more >

You can make a difference in the Apple Support Community!

When you sign up with your Apple Account, you can provide valuable feedback to other community members by upvoting helpful replies and User Tips.

Mail App: How it populates

Is anyone else repeatedly experiencing the Apple Mail application to be 'loading' or 'building' messages bottom to top some times and other times not. Does it have to do with all the keychains between Google and Apple trying to saved with auto-generated passwords underneath (meaning signal-sign-on), or is it something else.


My email has done this in various ways for the last year and I always 'fix' the problem by calling or using a workaround. Then it's temporarily 'fixed' or included in an update, but WHY is it happening? Is there a filter I'm missing? The messages stack on top of one another and quickly - like slurping a big smoothie at convenience store or something. I am referring to the MacBook Pro, however more people must experience it as well?! And if not, how on earth am I the only one to report it contained and get it 'fixed' just in time for the next iOS update? How and where or not Apple choses to update or alter their products is up to them, but I can't repeat the same cycle again with all the new features too.


Also, the sound modifications made to the Music app that skips at various intervals combined with television doing the same thing to modify their broadcasts is overwhelming. I think it alarms people more so that it helps. And I don't think it has anything to do with hardware or Wifi provider to the phone.


Someone tell me I'am not THE only person to report this info?


MacBook Pro 16″, macOS 15.2

Posted on Jan 16, 2025 7:11 PM

Reply
1 reply

Jan 19, 2025 7:50 AM in response to N_Dunn

Is anyone else repeatedly experiencing the Apple Mail application to be 'loading' or 'building' messages bottom to top some times and other times not. Does it have to do with all the keychains between Google and Apple trying to saved with auto-generated passwords underneath (meaning signal-sign-on), or is it something else.

My email has done this in various ways for the last year and I always 'fix' the problem by calling or using a workaround. Then it's temporarily 'fixed' or included in an update, but WHY is it happening? Is there a filter I'm missing? The messages stack on top of one another and quickly - like slurping a big smoothie at convenience store or something. I am referring to the MacBook Pro, however more people must experience it as well?!

I'm not at all sure what you are describing. Maybe I don't receive enough emails to see it "populating."

I do see it sync with iCloud when I open it up (messages deleted on other devices remove in some sequence).

And if not, how on earth am I the only one to report it contained and get it 'fixed' just in time for the next iOS update?

Not sure how an iPhone update affects your Mac.


How and where or not Apple choses to update or alter their products is up to them, but I can't repeat the same cycle again with all the new features too.

Also, the sound modifications made to the Music app that skips at various intervals combined with television doing the same thing to modify their broadcasts is overwhelming. I think it alarms people more so that it helps. And I don't think it has anything to do with hardware or Wifi provider to the phone.

There is a setting in Music to enable "Sound Check" which equalizes volumes. Perhaps that is what you mean. I don't use Music nor watch over-the-air broadcasts on TV, so not really certain.

Someone tell me I'am not THE only person to report this info?

I'm not sure how anyone would know that. I suppose people could tell you they also see what you are describing. I can't tell you that, though.

Mail App: How it populates

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.