Outlook 2007

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If you work with Microsoft Outlook on a daily basis, this upgrade can make scheduling simpler and emailing more interesting. Still, we wish Instant Search and email rendering were better.… Read full review

Typical price: £84.99
Editors' rating:
  • 7.8 out of 10
7.8 out of 10
User rating:
  • 8 out of 10
8 out of 10

Pros

  • Lets you drag tasks and meetings to the calendar
  • Allows image editing within messages
  • Speeds up searches
  • Integrates with other Office software
  • Adds straightforward email security warnings
  • Emails can display previews of Office files
  • Offers new contact cards
  • Most commands remain in place from Outlook 2003

Cons

  • Outlook 2007's new Instant Search didn't find recent content within Inbox subfolders;
  • Uses Word 2007's HTML for rendering, which leaves some formatted messages looking lopsided
  • Expensive technical support

If you depend upon Microsoft Outlook's email and calendar, the 2007 version offers welcome changes that can save time and keep you on your toes. Microsoft renovated all of its Office applications for 2007, but many of these updates simply repackage existing features. By contrast, Outlook 2007 offers new features that could change the way you work. Admittedly, many of these tweaks are for ease of use and don't exactly reinvent this desktop email client, but the changes enhance what Outlook already did well and make for a more elegant and practical experience overall.

Our installation of various Office editions on Windows XP computers took between 10 and 20 minutes, which was quicker than prior editions of Office. You'll have to be online to access services later, such as Help and How-To as well as Clip Art and document templates. Our review of Microsoft Office 2007 details the installation process and the ingredients of each edition. Beneath the surface, the Outlook Connector is mostly the same as in the past for setting up your email. If you run Outlook 2007 on Windows XP, you'll either have to install its new Instant Search separately or keep the older search engine. Windows Vista users already have Instant Search through the included Windows Desktop Search.

Interface


Luckily for those upgrading, Microsoft has spiffed up the formerly drab, grey look of Outlook without rearranging most of its commands. Unlike the 2007 versions of Word, Excel and PowerPoint, Outlook 2007's main interface shuns the Ribbon toolbar and keeps its File, Edit and other menus. That makes it easy to jump right in and start using Outlook 2007 if you're accustomed to an earlier version. The Ribbon emerges once you begin to compose a message or an appointment. Within the main window, a new, collapsible To-Do bar summarises your current appointments and tasks for the day.

Outlook's new security settings block suspicious links and images.


When you compose an email message, the tabbed Ribbon appears, allowing you to format the text as well as attach files, contacts and images. A similar window appears when you schedule appointments, set up tasks or edit individual contacts. Under the Options tab, you must choose HTML or Rich Text if you want to attach images. If you're working in plain text, the buttons for dressing up messages will fade. As with the layout of other Office 2007 programs, contextual tabs appear and disappear based upon your work at hand; for example, the picture-formatting menu shows up only once you've clicked on an image. Getting used to this can take some practice.


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Member reviews

I like Outlook in general, Microsoft is not always the best choice (but very often the only choice ;). Yeah I know the Instant search could do better (but this is no problem for me with lookeen) yeah HTML for rendering e-mails is, well stupid but that is the way Microsoft thinks (oh we are Microsoft, we don't have to take care of other formats/programs/people). All in all it could be better but I can work with it.

Member's rating:
  • 8.00 out of 10
8.00 out of 10
eyecansee 4 December, 2010 17:41
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