This Microsoft-owned tasks/to-do solution now provides a Calendar App that pushes your most-pressing to-dos into your Outlook calendar. But here’s a quick rundown of how the three new Calendar Apps will work. I’m not seeing this functionality in Outlook for iOS, so I assume it will pop up later in the day. This, Microsoft says, will provide you with a far better view of your day, week and months ahead. Going forward, it will also support Calendar Apps, where you connect existing apps you already use to Outlook, so you can see your all of your tasks, events and notes in one place. Here’s how it works: Outlook for Android and iOS already supports email and storage (OneDrive, Dropbox, Box, and Google Drive) accounts, and calendars from, Office 365, Gmail, iCloud and other sources. At the time of that acquisition, Microsoft promised to move Sunrise functionality into its core Outlook app. By connecting your calendar with a wide range of services, Outlook will be able to provide you with a far better view of your day, week and months ahead.”Īs Microsoft notes, this capability is one of the first major functional changes to come to Outlook from Sunrise, the mobile calendar app (also for Android and iOS) that Microsoft purchased last year. “With Calendar Apps, you can connect your apps-Wunderlist, Facebook and Evernote to start with-to see all your tasks, events and notes from your digital life in one place: your Outlook calendar. “Today we are launching Calendar Apps for Outlook on iOS and Android,” the Outlook Team notes in a new post to the Office Blogs. So Outlook calendar on these popular mobile platforms will soon work with Wunderlist, Facebook and Evernote. Microsoft announced today that is opening up its Outlook app on Android and iOS to support third-party tasks, events and notes in Calendar.
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