It took a while for the contents of my INBOX to appear, but then it did with lots of glorious colorful icons:Īt first the letters in the tiles threw me for a loop then I realized they represent the individuals of the sender. The configuration process completed successfully. I chose “Exchange” then entered my business email address, server name, domain name and password.
I went to the Google Play store, located the app, clicked install and within a few minutes Outlook appeared on my Samsung Galaxy S5.Īdding an account was pretty much the same as with the Android mail app: My company uses Exchange 2010, which is supported by the Outlook app the oldest in-house version of Exchange it will work with is 2007. I use the default email client on my Samsung Galaxy S5 for both my business (Activesync) and personal (IMAP) email, but I was curious about what the Outlook app (technically a preview the iOS version is more advanced) had to offer. Outlook works with Microsoft Exchange, Office 365, (including Hotmail, MSN), Gmail, Yahoo Mail, and iCloud.”
And attach files from your email, OneDrive, or Dropbox with just a few taps.
Easily view your calendar, share available times, and schedule meetings. Swipe to quickly delete, archive, or schedule messages you want to handle later. Outlook automatically surfaces your most important messages – across all your email accounts. “Outlook is a free email app that helps you get more done from anywhere with one unified view of your email, calendar, contacts, and attachments.
Microsoft has released a dedicated Outlook app to the Google Play store for Android devices 4.1 and above (there is also a similar client for iOS). Microsoft has released an Outlook client for Android.