6.3.1
Franz learned to read the room this release, quite literally. If your computer runs in a right-to-left language, Franz now mirrors its whole layout to match, so everything sits where your eyes expect it. We also tracked down two email quirks that chipped away at trust (attachments that slipped off drafts, paragraphs that looked squashed before sending) and put a stop to a startup crash that hit some Windows machines without a word of explanation.
New
- Franz now follows your system's text direction. Set your computer to a right-to-left language (Arabic, Hebrew, Farsi, or Urdu) and the entire app mirrors to match: the sidebar, your services, settings, popups, even popped-out and preview windows all land on the correct side. Writing right-to-left feels natural too. The search field, the email composer, and the assistant now align your text the way it should read, whatever language Franz itself is displayed in.
Improved
- Unread badges in the horizontal tab bar are smaller and tidier, so they tell you what's waiting without crowding the tab.
Fixed
- Email drafts keep their attachments. Files you added to a draft could quietly disappear when you reopened it later. They now save with everything else, so your draft is exactly how you left it.
- What you see in the composer is what they get. Multi-paragraph emails (especially pasted text) looked squashed together while you wrote them, even though recipients saw proper spacing. The composer and Franz's own message view now match the sent mail.
- Franz no longer crashes silently on some Windows PCs. On certain machines, often ones with integrated AMD graphics, a hardware check could take Franz down a few seconds after launch with no error at all. That check now runs safely on its own, isolated from the rest of the app, and Franz only uses graphics acceleration when it's proven stable on your hardware.