Microsoft Office 2016 Outlook

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Microsoft Dynamics CRM 2016 for Microsoft Office Outlook (Outlook client) Important! Selecting a language below will dynamically change the complete page content to that language. Note: The steps to install the 2016 or 2013 versions of Office Professional Plus, Office Standard, or a stand-alone app such as Word or Project might be different if you got Office through one of the following: Microsoft HUP: If you bought Office for personal use through your company, see Install Office through HUP. Volume license versions: If you work in an organization that manages your. Open the Outlook 2016 desktop app. Click the File tab in the top-left corner of the Outlook screen. Click the Open & Export option in the blue vertical column that appeared on the left side of the.

  1. Microsoft Office 2016 Outlook Problem
  2. Microsoft Office 2016 Outlook Working Offline

Office 2016 include applications such as Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook. They're available as a one-time purchase for use on a single PC. Microsoft 365 plans include premium versions of these applications plus other services that are enabled over the Internet, including online storage with OneDrive and Skype minutes for home use. Some of the new features in Microsoft Outlook 2016 are as follows: Push email support in Outlook 2016. Although push emails are not a new thing and have been implemented in Apple Mail, Windows Mail (Metro), Android's Mail app, and iOS's Mail app, the feature is now available to people and businesses that rely heavily on the Office Suite and Office365 subscription.

If you've been an Office user for a long time, you've probably noticed the tremendous changes that Microsoft has made over the years. Since the year 2000, you've worked with Office 2000, XP, 2003, 2007, 2010 and 2013. Each of these versions introduced new improvements to your work day.

The Office suite is now more than just a set of tools for word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, publishing, and email messaging. Productivity has been brought to a higher level with sharing, co-authoring, mobility and more. Our previous blog focused on new cool features of Office 2016. Today I'd like to compare how Office 2016 differs from 2013 and 2010.

If you've been stuck with an earlier version of Office, you probably have a good reason. On1 resize 2019 7 13 7 0. You may have third-party tools integrated with the software, or other business constraints that don't allow you to upgrade. Or, you simply haven't found the time to think about it. If you've had compatibility issues, you've probably installed free Office Viewers and you think it does the trick.

You may have valid reasons for sticking with an older version of the Office Suite. But keep this in mind: your business data are a financial asset that has to be protected. Will Office 2016 help you do this? Yes, and a lot more.

Don't bother with versions ever again, get Office 365 and always work with the latest productivity suite!

We've compared the following elements in the two previous versions of the Office suite with Office 2016 on the following elements:

The best way to find out if the new version is worth the upgrade is to try Office for yourself.

Office 2016 is built for teamwork

Teamwork FeaturesOffice 2010Office 2013Office 2016
Co-author like never before in Word, PowerPoint and OneNote.
Basic co-authoring (ability to edit in parallel)
Real-time typing in Word lets you see others' edits as they make them.
Improved version history
Share button in ribbon in W/X/P
Thanks to Skype in-app integration, you can IM, screen share, talk or video chat right in your docs.
Skype Meetings offers HD video, desktop sharing, co-authoring, presentations, and more.
Skype Meetings
HD Video and co-authoring
Office 365 Groups now available as part of Outlook and on iOS, Android, and Windows
With OneNote shared notebooks, you have one place to share and see notes
Take your Office anywhere with a set of Office mobile apps across Windows, Android, and iOS.

Office 2016 works for you

Works for you FeaturesOffice 2010Office 2013Office 2016
Outlook 2016 is built to give you lightning fast search, remove low priority mail, and make sure everyone has the right access with Modern Attachments
Outlook Clutter in 2016
Most recently used documents in Outlook
Modern attachments
Improved autosuggest search
Your most recently used documents list travels with you across your devices.
Excel 2016 is the most powerful analysis tool in your arsenal
Integrated Power Pivot (integration new in 2016)
Integrated Get & Transform and 3D Maps (integration new in 2016)
One-Click forecasting
New chart types
Publish to Power BI
Just type the word and Tell Me takes you directly to the feature you need.
Smart Lookup brings insights from the web right into your Office docs.

Office 2016 is perfect on Windows 10.

Windows 10 FeaturesOffice 2010Office 2013Office 2016
Windows Hello logs you into your PC and Office – all in one simple step.
Let Cortana with Office 365 integration help with tasks like meeting prep
Office Mobile apps on Windows 10 are touch-friendly, fast, and optimized for on-the-go.
Continuum & Office Mobile apps on Windows 10 phones. Use your phone like a PC.
OneDrive storage & Windows 10 is a built-in, secure way to store and share all your stuff.

Office 2016 is the most secure Office

Security FeaturesOffice 2010Office 2013Office 2016
Data Loss Prevention helps significantly reduce the risk of leaking sensitive data, by giving IT admins tools to centrally create, manage and enforce policies for content authoring and document sharing. (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook)
Multi-factor Authentication allows you to securely access content anywhere – even when you're away from the corporate network. (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook)
Information Rights Management helps you encrypt your data online and off.
Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook
Visio

Looking for a backup solution for your Office documents? Visit this page.

Office 2016 offers flexible Click-to-Run options

IT Admin FeaturesOffice 2010Office 2013Office 2016
With deferred updates, you choose when you update—once a month or every three months and validate up to four months prior to deployment.
Improved integration with System Center Configuration Manager for efficient distribution of updates.
New Background Intelligence Transfer Service (BITS) provides better network traffic management.
Simplified activation management, with new controls in Office 365 Admin Portal that allow admins to manage device activations across users.

Office 2016 has improved Outlook performance

Outlook performance FeaturesOffice 2010Office 2013Office 2016
New Internet-friendly MAPI-HTTP protocol enhances Exchange/Outlook connectivity.
Outlook is more responsive on unreliable networks with the elimination of foreground network calls.
Reduced time to download messages, display the message list, and show new email after hibernation.
New settings let users better manage storage by only retaining 1, 3, 7, 14 or 30 days of mail on a device.

Why should you upgrade to Office 2016? To collaborate better and be more productive.

You can still buy Office in the usual 'one box, one installation' perpetual license at your retailer (up to $519 for Office 2016 Professional). However, it is also available in a Software-as-a-Service model (Office Apps). One license gives you the right to install Office apps on 5 PCs, 5 Macs and 5 mobile devices. Subscription fees start at less than $10 per seat per month. Office Apps are available in an online mode, using a web browser, when you cannot install them locally.

With Office Apps, there's no upfront investment and you're guaranteed to always have access to the latest version.

Planning to upgrade to Outlook 2016? This guide contains a lot of preparation and other information to get yourself ready to ensure a smooth transition

Aside from the preparation steps, this guide informs you about what to expect when you start Outlook 2016 for the first time after you upgraded and how to troubleshoot several issues you may encounter during or after the installation.

  • Installing Outlook/Office 2016
  • Special upgrade notices:

Tip!
Have you already successfully upgraded to Outlook 2016?
Then you might enjoy the guides New and Changed in Outlook 2016 and Where do I find…? instead.

Supported versions of Windows

In order to install Outlook 2016, you'll need at least the following version of Windows and Service Pack level:

  • Windows 7 SP1 (32-bit or 64-bit)
  • Windows 8 (32-bit or 64-bit)
  • Windows 10 (32-bit or 64-bit)

If you want to use Outlook 2016 on a server version of Windows you can use:

  • Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 (64-bit)
  • Windows Server 2012 (64-bit)
  • Windows Server 2012 R2 (64-bit)
  • Windows Server 2016 (64-bit)


Right click on 'Computer' in the Start Menu or Explorer and choose Properties to see which Windows Service Pack you have installed. Another way to see it is via: Control Panel-> System and Security-> System

Trying to install Office 2016 on Windows XP or Windows Vista will result in the error:
The specified program requires a newer version of Windows.

Supported versions of Exchange

If you are making use of an Exchange account, the Exchange server has to be one of the following versions. Earlier versions of Exchange are not supported.

  • Exchange 2010
  • Exchange 2013
  • Exchange 2016

Tip!
To find out which version of Exchange you are connecting to now see this Quick Tip.

Notable features requiring at least Exchange 2013

  • Site Mailboxes; A new sharing and collaboration mailbox to unite mailbox data and stored documents (also requires SharePoint 2013).
  • Policy Tips; An extension of the MailTips feature to inform you that you might be sending out sensitive information (within Exchange this is knows as Data Loss Prevention or DLP).
  • Mail Apps; A new way to add (external web) services and extensions to Outlook which are managed on the Exchange server rather than on the local Outlook client via an add-in.

Note:
In order to use some of the functionality in Outlook 2016, you'll need to configure your Exchange account with Cached Exchange Mode enabled (CEM). This is similar to Outlook 2010 and Outlook 2013. For an overview of features requiring CEM see: Outlook 2010: New features and Cached Exchange Mode

Notable features requiring Office 365

  • Clutter;Clutter is a machine based learning feature that automatically puts messages that you are most likely to ignore in the Clutter folder. It does this based on what you've done with similar messages in the past. This feature also applies to Outlook.com mailboxes.
  • Focused Mailbox; Focused Mailbox replaces the Clutter feature and instead of putting the messages into a separate folder, they remain in your Inbox folder and you can switch between the 'Focused' and 'Other' view.
  • Groups for Office 365; A new type of shared mailbox you can subscribe to (or even create yourself) which also contains a Calendar and provides a shared storage location and a shared OneNote Notebook for all members on OneDrive for Business.

Choosing between 32-bit and 64-bit

Microsoft still recommends installing the 32-bit edition of Office 2016 instead of the 64-bit edition unless you have a specific need that requires the 64-bit edition of Office 2016.

Microsoft Office 2016 Outlook Problem

However, when you have a 64-bit edition of Windows and you know that all your add-ins and other applications that rely on Office support the 64-bit edition of Office 2016, you can safely install the 64-bit edition.

When it comes to Outlook, there is no direct benefit of having the 64-bit edition instead of the 32-bit edition.

For more information see: Should I install the 32-bit or 64-bit version of Office/Outlook?

Note:
Even when you are using the 32-bit edition of Office 2016, some add-ins might not be compatible yet with Office 2016. You can check with the vendor of the add-in to verify its compatibility. If you run into issues with Outlook after the upgrade, start with disabling your add-ins.

Microsoft Office 2016 Outlook Working Offline

Uninstall any previous MSI-based installation version first

Only a single version of Outlook can be installed at a time on a computer. When installing Office 2016 while a previous version of Outlook is still installed, Outlook 2016 will be installed and the previous version of Outlook will be removed; even when you select to keep the previous versions.

If you do not plan to use any of the Office applications of a previous version of Office, it is recommended to completely uninstall the Office suite before starting the installation process of Office 2016 unless you are using Office 365. This is because an upgrade process will still leave several (support) components installed.

If you only want to install Outlook 2016 and combine it with Office applications of previous versions of Office see the Outlook 2016 compatibility with previous versions of Office section later in this guide.

Note:
When uninstalling Office, you will not lose any settings or Outlook data and settings will still be automatically upgraded. It of course never hurts to make a backup of your Outlook data first.

If you are having difficulties removing your current version of Office via Control Panel, you can use the FixIt from the Microsoft KB article below which matches with the version that you wish to uninstall:

Installing Outlook/Office 2016: Office 365 installation

When you are currently using an Office 365 installation of Office 2013, then upgrading to Office 2016 is going to be really easy as it will be offered as a regular update.

If the update isn't being offered to you yet, go to:
File-> Office Account-> Update Options-> Update Now

If you still aren't being updated to Office 2016 then, you can download the Office 2016 installer from your Office 365 Portal page:

  • Download: Office 365 for Home subscriptions
  • Download: Office 365 for Business subscriptions

There is no need to uninstall your current Office 365 installation first.

Installing Outlook/Office 2016: MSI-based installation

Now that your computer has been prepared, you can run the installer to install Office 2016. By default, it will install the 32-bit edition unless you specifically tell it not to. If the 32-bit edition is what you want (again; this is recommended), then just follow the setup instructions and move to the next section in this guide. If you want to install the 64-bit edition, keep reading…

In order to install the 64-bit edition of Office 2016, you'll first need to uninstall all 32-bit Office applications, including older versions. If any such application is still installed, you will not be able to install the 64-bit edition of Office.

When you start Setup from an installation medium that has both the 32-bit and the 64-bit edition on it, you'll be installing the 32-bit version of Office by default.

To install the 64-bit edition, you must close the current Setup window and browse to the installation source (for instance on the CD or DVD-drive). Here you'll find a folder called office. Open it and run the setup64.exe file located in this folder. The setup process is further the same as for the 32-bit version of Office.

Starting Outlook for the first time after the upgrade

When you start Outlook for the first time after the upgrade, the startup could take some time. This is because your previous settings are being migrated.


Mail profiles are upgraded on startup and some accounts will be re-cached.

If you are upgrading from a version earlier than Outlook 2007 Service Pack 2, then several extensive file structure changes to the pst-file are being made which could take a lot of time (especially with a large pst-file). Upgrading from a later version usually goes a lot quicker.

When the processing is being performed in the background, Outlook notifies you with a Notification Bar at the top in your main Outlook Window. If you close this Notification Bar, then you can also press on the File button to monitor the progress in Backstage

Microsoft


The 'Upgrade in progress' notification is shown when a conversion is still taking place in the background. (click on image for full notification message)

Note:
While upgrading from a previous version of Outlook will automatically upgrade your mail profile, it still is recommended to recreate you mail profile when upgrading from Outlook 2010 or previous due to deep level changes to multi-account, Outlook.com and IMAP support and other configurations.

Special upgrade notices

Depending on your current configuration of Outlook and version, there are a couple of additional things to be aware of.

If you are an Office 365 subscriber and not yet ready to upgrade, you can postpone the automatic upgrade so you can prepare for it first.

Postponing the automatic Office 365 upgrade to Office 2016

When you are currently using Outlook 2013 as part of an Office 365 subscription, you can postpose the automatic upgrade to Office 2016 for up to a year after its release by setting a Registry value.

Key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftoffice15.0commonofficeupdate
Value name: enableautomaticupgrade
Value type: REG_DWORD
Value: 0

As long as you have this Registry value set, you can postpone the automatic upgrade until September 2016. During this time, you'll of course still get updates for Office 2013 as part of your Office 365 subscription.

Note:
Administrators can also set the above Registry value by using Group Policies to prevent Office 365 ProPlus 2013 from automatically upgrading to Office 365 ProPlus 2016.

You'll find the setting under:
Computer Configuration-> Administrative Templates-> Microsoft Office 2013 (Machine)-> Updates-> Enable Automatic Upgrade: Disabled

Business Contact Manager compatibility

If you were using Outlook Business Contact Manager (BCM) with Outlook, then you'll no longer be able to use it with Office 2016. BCM will not be updated for Office 2016 compatibility.

If you are currently relying of BCM, you can uninstall Office 2016 and reinstall your previous version of Office and it will continue to work again. When you are using an Office 365 installation, make sure you set the Postpone key as instructed above so you'll not be automatically upgrade to Office 2016.

The replacement for BCM is Outlook Customer Manager (OCM). It is available via an Office 365 Business Premium subscription. There are also smartphone and tablet apps available to access your data on the go as well.

An alternative to BCM could be Microsoft Dynamics CRM. As BCM was originally also based on this product, you may find it to work quite similar and be able to directly migrate much of your data.

Microsoft Dynamics CRM is being offered in many variations including one specific for Small and Midsize Businesses.

iCloud compatibility

To use iCloud with Outlook 2016, you must update iCloud to at least version 5.1. Once you've done that, you can use the iCloud Control Panel to configure it to sync Outlook 2016 with your iCloud Mail, Contacts and Calendar.

Download: iCloud for Windows

Outlook 2010 and previous: Outlook Hotmail Connector accounts

Outlook.com/Hotmail accounts no longer use the Outlook Hotmail Connector but connect as an actual Exchange account.

If you still have the Outlook Hotmail Connector installed on your computer, you can uninstall it.

Outlook 2010 and previous: Personal Folders Backup add-in

Are you using Microsoft's Personal Folders Backup Add-in? You'll find it no longer working with Outlook 2016. In fact, Office 2010 wasn't officially supported by the add-in either.

You can choose to backup your pst-files manually or include them in other backup schedules which you have configured already.

Outlook 2010 and previous: Re-caching and recreation of mailboxes

Due to various mail account and data file changes, your mailbox will be re-cached from the mail server in the following situations:

  • If you are using an Exchange account, then your mailbox will be re-cached to a new compacter ost-file format.
  • If you are using an IMAP account, then your mailbox will also be re-cached in an ost-file rather than a pst-file. If your Sent Items and other default mailbox folders are mapped incorrectly see: Setting the Sent Items folder for IMAP accounts in Outlook 2013.

Outlook 2007 and previous: Migrating nk2-file/AutoSuggest

Outlook 2002/XP, Outlook 2003 and Outlook 2007 make use of an nk2-file to store recently used addresses in which are used as an AutoSuggest/AutoComplete feature when addressing a new message. Outlook 2016 no longer uses an nk2-file for caching but stores these addresses in the Outlook mailbox itself.

When you upgrade to Outlook 2016, the nk2-file is automatically imported upon starting Outlook 2016 for the first time. When you create a new Outlook mail profile or when using Outlook on a new computer, you can import an existing nk2-file in the following way;

  1. Copy the nk2-file to the following folder;
    • C:Users%username%AppDataRoamingMicrosoftOutlook
  2. Rename the nk2-file to the name of your mail profile.
    To find out this name use the Mail applet in Control Panel and click on the Show Profiles… button.
    By default, your profile is called 'Outlook'. So in that case you would call your file outlook.nk2.
  3. Start Outlook with the /importnk2 switch;
    • Start-> type; outlook.exe /importnk2
      (When you are using Windows 8 or Windows 10, just start typing after opening the Start Menu, a search field will automatically appear)
  4. Outlook will now process the nk2-file and import it into the Suggested Contacts folder. Outlook will automatically append .old to the nk2-file. So in our example it will now be called; outlook.nk2.old


Importing the nk2-file in Outlook 2016 on Windows 10.

Outlook 2016 compatibility with previous versions of Office

Unlike with previous versions of Office, it is not supported to have multiple versions of the application installed. This means that you can't have both Word 2013 and Word 2016 installed on your computer.

You can however have other standalone Office 2013 applications installed alongside Office 2016 as long as these are not included in the Office 2016/365 suite. For instance, you can have Project 2013 and/or Visio 2013 installed together with Office 2016. To do this, you must first install and fully update the standalone Office 2013 application before installing Office 2016.

Additionally see: Error: Stop, you should wait to install Office 2016. We'll have to remove the following if you continue.

Volume License based msi-installations of Outlook 2016 can still co-exist with previous versions of other Office applications on the same computer. There are a couple of side-notes though;

Attachment Previewers

Attachment Previewers for other Office applications will only work when the other Office applications are the 2016 versions as well. Rightfont 3 2 3 download free. The previewers of the 2007, 2010 and 2013 versions of Word, Excel and PowerPoint are not compatible with Outlook 2016.

Mail Merge

Just with any previous versions of Outlook, the Mail Merge feature only works when Word and Outlook are the same version.

Outlook 2016 standalone installations

Outlook 2016 is available as a standalone application as well without needing to install or buy the other Office 2016 applications. However, not all features might be available to you. Similar to Outlook 2007, Outlook 2010 and Outlook 2013, the following features require you to install Word 2016 as well;

  • Autoformat
  • AutoText
  • Background spelling
  • Synonym lookup
  • On-Object UI (including Smart Paste)
  • Data binding and placeholders
  • Grammar checker
  • Smart tags
  • Tables formatting
  • Various 'Save As' formats specific to Word
  • Go To tab of the Find/Replace feature
  • Citation and bibliography
  • Header and footer
  • Review and comments
  • Captions (for tables and images)
  • WordArt
  • Insert Screen Clipping/Screenshot
  • Access to the Word Object Model (for macro usage for example)

Tip!
To get Automatic spell check and Autocorrect working when you have Outlook 2016 without Word 2016 installed, you can use the following workaround: Automatic spell check and Autocorrect not working

Outlook Standalone version and Themes

Similar to Office 2007, Office 2010 and Office 2013, the Themes feature requires Outlook to be installed as part of a suite. A combination of Office 2016 Home & Student with a standalone installation of Outlook 2016 will not enable this feature.

You can find the Theme feature via;
File-> Options-> section Mail-> button Stationery and Fonts…





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