


#Outlook 365 shortcuts mark as read windows 10#
This is why Windows 10 development has has been focussed on only two things. The desktop, as far as Microsoft is concerned is only a legacy environment. This has manifested itself in the majority of resources going into the development of their MS 365 ecosystem.Ģ. It has been Microsoft's long term objective, for a few years now, to focus on it's cloud based systems. There are a few things we have to consider, to put this into some perspective:ġ. There is an awful lot of traffic on a plethora of forums about how slow, unreliable and buggy Outlook is. I could go on and on, but need to GET WORK-AROUNDs done while forced to use this, in my opinion, inferior business product. Unlike you, MS, most of us need to WORK at WORK, not play with real-estate-grabbing and largely useless toy icons.
#Outlook 365 shortcuts mark as read professional#
Caution, if you hide the main ribbon, keyboard shortcuts change (MS: "Surprise, Suckers!").ģ65 - Built "up" from a home-based non-business model focused on multi-media-for-profit, it left professional users fending for themselves for solutions. RIBBON - Omg, what Sesame Street grad created that awful monstrosity? The ribbon is so useless, it's best to permanently hide it, and customize the mini-ribbon.

Really MS? No GUI for a featuref you always had in an easily-configurable GUI? We are all supposed to see colors and sizes your way, or the hugely useless "accessible" way? I can give IT a heart attack by going into reg edit, and multiple other sites help with that as well. The first clue is that MS actually lists reg edit fixes to change options as simple as a scroll bar width or colors.

365 sucks in so many ways that it's difficult to list. You may be too young, but Outlook Express was the best they ever offered, and it has been all downhill since they stopped offering it. I could not possibly hate Microsoft more right now! And don't even get me started on OneDrive!! Let me guess, I suppose Microsoft won't apply the annual purchase price of 365 to a desktop version? And even if they did you'd be paying their MSRP price instead of the market price. Those are just 4 that immediately jump to mind. attach another email) except via a rudimentary process of first forwarding the other email as an attachment and then copy it to the other email you want to attach it to.assuming you need to attach multiple prior emails. In Outlook for 365 you can't search for related emails, if you choose to have copies of sent emails save in the folder they were originated from they save at the top without showing a date (so they don't display in sequential order with the rest of the conversation), you can't "edit" a sent email to add notes, you can't ""Add Item" (i.e. Premium? If they were being honest they would have said "watered down versions". and what have their results been.It's absolutely terrible!! I'm so po'd because Microsoft's promotion materials said that Office 365 versions of the apps were "Premium" versions. So at this point, I guess my underlying questions is, has anyone implemented this (at scale Outlook calendar sharing updates () using intune policy or GPO). Ranging from the order in which they display not caching correctly so order swaps on an outlook relaunch, issues on mobile overall, not being able to use Rich text format as a delegate on someones calendar using the outlook client, as well as other weird search issues with those who had it. In the last 48 hours, we have received a HUGE influx of issues with Shared calendars. So, fast forward a good amount of time, and I'd say about 10% of our users (in the hundreds) throughout support initiatives, ended up with this checkbox. Not that it ever seemed to do much but was always worth a shot, ya know? In terms of winver/outlook version we are on 21H1 and outlook version 2112.Ībout a few months back, we would constantly have issues with outlook shared calendars and would typically try to hit the checkbox "Turn on Shared Calendars Improvements". I am a SysAdmin at a pretty big firm that relies heavily on people using "room" calendars, working out of shared mailboxes and their associated calendars, as well as people being delegates of others and having their calendars mapped on their native outlook client.
