Microsoft: Here Comes The Biggest Change To Outlook For Windows Since 1997

Microsoft has moved its recently released calendar-syncing improvements for the native Outlook app for Windows out of preview and is starting to roll it out more broadly. 

The Outlook Calendaring Team at Microsoft seems pretty confident this will be a major but subtle improvement to using shared calendars within Outlook on Windows. It released the preview of the new experience in 2019 and has been testing it with users who opt-in to it. 

"Eventually, it will be just "on", but this is a journey and arguably the biggest change to Outlook for Windows since its initial release in 1997, so we want our every step to be cautious," Microsoft explains in a blogpost first spotted by The Verge.

SEE: Windows 10 Start menu hacks (TechRepublic Premium)

The changes aim to improve the speed and reliability of how shared calendars within the Outlook Windows client sync changes that users make on a shared calendar to the calendar owner and members. 

That's rather important: when these updates aren't synced in a timely fashion, conflict and confusion can ensue. 

"Since summer 2019, we polished the experience and fixed bugs, thanks to many customer reports. With tens of thousands of daily users on the preview, we feel confident now that the experience is going to delight calendar delegates," Microsoft notes. 

So far, Microsoft has released the improvements to about 10% of Outlook for Windows users and it plans to expand that through the second half of the year. 

Despite it being the biggest change in two decades, Microsoft hopes that calendar owners and colleagues who can manage that calendar don't notice anything but a smoother experience. 

"This is one of those improvements that should be invisible because it eliminates issues but doesn't change the core product functionality," Microsoft explains. 

SEE: Microsoft adds enterprise support for PyTorch AI on Azure

But it does mean calendars should sync faster and won't be so unreliable for those managing the calendar. 

The bit that's being enabled for Outlook on Windows is instant syncing under the new model for the shared calendar, according to a Microsoft support document

"The service instantly syncs changes to the recipient's local copy. This triggers a push notification to the application which syncs the changes instantly," Microsoft explains. Previously, Outlook only periodically polled the owners mailbox for changes and then synced them. 

RECENT NEWS

Reassessing AI Investments: What The Correction In US Megacap Tech Stocks Signals

The recent correction in US megacap tech stocks, including giants like Nvidia, Tesla, Meta, and Alphabet, has sent rippl... Read more

AI Hype Meets Reality: Assessing The Impact Of Stock Declines On Future Tech Investments

Recent declines in the stock prices of major tech companies such as Nvidia, Tesla, Meta, and Alphabet have highlighted a... Read more

Technology Sector Fuels U.S. Economic Growth In Q2

The technology sector played a pivotal role in accelerating America's economic growth in the second quarter of 2024.The ... Read more

Tech Start-Ups Advised To Guard Against Foreign Investment Risks

The US National Counterintelligence and Security Center (NCSC) has advised American tech start-ups to be wary of foreign... Read more

Global IT Outage Threatens To Cost Insurers Billions

Largest disruption since 2017’s NotPetya malware attack highlights vulnerabilities.A recent global IT outage has cause... Read more

Global IT Outage Disrupts Airlines, Financial Services, And Media Groups

On Friday morning, a major IT outage caused widespread disruption across various sectors, including airlines, financial ... Read more