Send and Track
How often have you sent an e-mail to someone and thought to yourself “I better follow up with them in a few days to make sure that they do X” or thought “I just made a promise to do some work, I better remind myself to do it.” Well now you can do just that! No more cc’ing yourself so that you can flag it in your Inbox! No more dragging the mail out of Sent-Items just so that you can set a reminder! In Outlook12, you can flag and/or set a reminder on a mail message for yourself when sending, thus making the mail appear in the To-Do Bar, etc. after the message has been sent. In addition, if you want to send a flag to the recipient of your mail, you can, but that is a separate option – setting a flag on a mail is now primarily for the sender.
Flagging an e-mail on send
When you receive a response to an e-mail that you have flagged for yourself, be it one that you flagged when you sent it or one that you received and then flagged, you will see an infobar in the received mail.
Received response to a flagged message
From the infobar, you can open the original message, thereby giving you an opportunity to mark the original complete (or check that the response that you received was the one that you were looking for), or you can find all related messages which gives you the full thread of e-mails.
Watch out: your boss will love this feature and use it all the time (mine does)!
Side note: reminders now fire from all folders – not just the Inbox. So you can flag e-mail and set a reminder, then file it, and the reminder will still fire.
Comments
Anonymous
January 26, 2006
The comment has been removedAnonymous
January 26, 2006
i use gmail a whole lot. they have this very simple feature, "star it". it is so simple that if there is any mail that i simply need to get back to later, it is in the starred section. this allows me to use it often because of the so few options it has.
however, if they were going to build on it, only those who have been using for a long time will like it. the new comers will be left out.Anonymous
January 26, 2006
I've never been this excited about an Outlook release. Finally, some people are thinking about making a true "productivity app" and not just an email client with tasks/calendaring tacked on as afterthoughts.
I had decided a while ago that I would move away from Outlook (and the proprietary PST format) but This may keep me on the MS wagon a little longer!Anonymous
January 27, 2006
Melissa,
Will this feature be available through emails sent/received using IMAP accounts, or just on emails from exchange accounts?
Could you let us know which of the functionality you mention in this blog (flagging, above post, etc.) is available with IMAP accounts?
Thanks for the updates!Anonymous
January 29, 2006
I do not see the infobar on emails that I send and flag when I get a response. This would be wonderful if I could get it working....Anonymous
January 29, 2006
Do calendar reminders also fire from all folders now too?Anonymous
January 30, 2006
There is currently a bug in Beta1 that the infobar on e-mails that you send only appears when you select Custom... or Flag for Recipients... Regardless of the infobar message, (or lack of it!), the message will appear in the To-Do Bar after it has been sent.
Calendar reminders will also fire from all folders.
-MelissaAnonymous
February 08, 2006
Melissa,
Jensen Harris has recently written about Time Zones and that stirred me to respond. I'm copying my comments to you as you seem to be the person who writes about Tasks & Time Management.
Jensen wrote about how you can show two time zones side by side in the calendar but what about people who need to coordinate appointments in three time-zones?
Also, if I'm in London and setting up an appointment for next week when I am in Seattle, I have to manually calculate the GMT time and enter that.
You should be able to specify the time zone for appointments, EG 16:00 PST, 19:30 CET, etc.
Yes, I can show the PST times beside the GMT ones and select the correct PST times before I create the appointment but that is forcing me into a counterintuitive way of working.
You should also be able to specify "no time zone" so an appointment floats at, say, 16:00 wherever you are in the world.
Outlook should default to the current time zone but make intelligent guesses from what it finds in the location field.
If I enter an appointment for 16:00, location = "Seattle" I'd expect Outlook to know that that should be PST (or PDT depending on the date).
I know that none of these changes are trivial, involving Exchange and Windows Mobile as well as Outlook but this assumption that "all times are entered and displayed as 'local'" is not 'real-world' and should have been fixed years ago.
What do you think?Anonymous
February 08, 2006
I just wanted to agree with Simon Jones completely. I too am a fan of Jensen Harris' blog and made my way here because of it.
Time Zone support in Outlook needs to be improved. If I have a plane flight appointment that begins in NY and ends in WA, I shouldn't have to do some math (however simple) to figure out what times to enter into Outlook.Anonymous
February 15, 2006
It is unfathomable that Outlook has gone through this many revisions without better time zone support. Is it really that unusual that people who travel use Outlook? Why is it so hard to put a time zone drop-down list right next to the appointment time so that we can select which time zone the appointment starts and ends in? Showing two time zones is insufficient. I need at least three: the one I am in now, the one where my flight leaves from, and the one where my flight arrives from. I figured I spend about 100 hours a year just scheduling flights in Outlook because of its horrible time zone support. It is extremely disappointing that Outlook 12 does not appear to fix this issue but instead focuses on a bunch of glitz that few people will need.Anonymous
February 15, 2006
Thanks for all of the feedback about time zones. We are working on some improvements in that area that I cannot disclose until we get closer to releasing them to the public. Time zones are an area that we know we need to improve on and we are working in it! Hopefully what we have in the works will help to ease your pain.
-MelissaAnonymous
April 02, 2006
PingBack from http://gaba.lenard.hu/2006/04/03/az-outlook-2007-hasznos-ujdonsagai/Anonymous
May 17, 2006
Hallelujah. I've only recently been moved over to Outlook/Exchange after years on Lotus Notes Mail. I never in a million years thought I'd find myself fondly nostalgic for Notes (a mail client I've cordially hated for all the years I was compelled to use it) but timezone handling in Outlook has pushed me in that direction. In Notes Calendar, one simply specifies the time zone of the event...period. It defaults (of course) to the current zone. That only leaves the (I agree, desirable) feature of independently assigning the zone of the start and end times, useful for flights. And the capability to specify "no timezone" for an event (something Notes did not have, but my Palm DateBk5 program does).Anonymous
May 30, 2006
Please, please, please add me to the list of people begging for better timezone support!
It bugged me when I was travelling around Europe a lot. It bugged me when I was working in the US and it bugs me now I'm in Australia.
Does no-one on the Exchange/Outlook team travel for business?
Do they never have to schedule a meeting with someone outside their own office!
It (apart from improved Entourage like live searching) is the one area that I hope the next release of Outlook can get working (actually, I might go fire up my Powerbook and see if the Mactopia team have already got it working!)Anonymous
May 30, 2006
It's a silly thing but neither Outlook on my PC nor on my PDA allow me to set appointments in different timezones. Now usually it's no big deal because the whole world revolves around me, but sometimes Sydney and Brisbane are on different timezones oAnonymous
May 31, 2006
OffBeatMammal, Bill Clark, and friends,
Your wish has been granted. There is now time zone support in Outlook. Check out Beta2.
-MelissaAnonymous
May 31, 2006
The comment has been removedAnonymous
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