Deep search
Search
Copilot
Images
Videos
Maps
News
Shopping
More
Flights
Travel
Hotels
Real Estate
Notebook
Top stories
Sports
U.S.
2024 Election
Local
World
Science
Technology
Entertainment
Business
More
Politics
Any time
Past hour
Past 24 hours
Past 7 days
Past 30 days
Best match
Most recent
Microsoft is officially killing Windows Mail and Calendar
Microsoft is killing off Windows 11’s Mail and Calendar apps by the end of the year
Microsoft is planning to no longer support the Windows Mail, Calendar, and People apps later this year. The software giant has been moving existing users of these apps over to the new Outlook for Windows app in recent months,
Microsoft explains why Windows 11’s new Outlook is better than Mail & Calendar
Microsoft explains why Windows 11's new Outlook is better than Mail & Calendar but the reasons aren't convincing enough.
End of an era: Microsoft is planning to phase out Windows 11’s Mail and Calendar apps by the end of this year
Microsoft will discontinue the built-in Mail and Calendar apps in Windows 11 after December 31, 2024, urging users to switch to the web-based Outlook app instead.
Support for Windows Mail, Calendar and People apps will finish at the end of this year as new Outlook elbows its way onto the center stage
According to Windows Latest, you can either choose to open the new Outlook when booting Mail & Calendar, or reject it with a "not now" prompt, but the new Outlook will still open regardless of the next boot. You can also downgrade the apps to prevent this from happening, but these will also stop working on December 31.
Microsoft persuades Mail and Calendar users to migrate to Outlook — Mail and Calendar app will cease to work after December 31
Microsoft is notifying its Mail and Calendar app users to switch to free web-based Outlook. Many users have reported noticing pop-ups from the app. Microsoft insists users make the migration by December 31, 2024. After that date, the app will only display emails and calendar entries saved until the scheduled date.
Microsoft is killing off these Windows 11 productivity apps at the end of the year
Microsoft is ending support for its Mail and Calendar apps for Windows 11, as it moves to make the new online and free Outlook its only mail option.
Got Windows 11? Say Goodbye to Mail, Calendar, People Apps
It's time to ditch your Windows Mail, Calendar, and People apps if you use them. Microsoft is no longer supporting the Mail, Calendar, and People apps on Windows 11. Collectively, these apps offer functionalities found in the more streamlined,
Microsoft is killing your favorite Windows 11 apps: Here's why
Microsoft has announced that it will be ending support for its Mail, Calendar, and People apps on Windows 11 by the end of this year. The tech giant has been migrating users of these popular apps to the new Outlook for Windows app over the last few months. Now, the company has set a final support date for these apps as December 31.
Microsoft is officially killing Windows Mail and Calendar by year’s end
Users of three older
Microsoft
apps will soon have to get ready for a changeover. As the company announced in a support document, the Windows Mail,
Calendar
, and People apps will no longer be supported once this year comes to a close. The classic Outlook ...
Thurrott
6d
Microsoft Reminds Customers That Windows Mail, Calendar, and People are EOL in December
“Support for Windows Mail,
Calendar
, and People will end on December 31, 2024,” the
Microsoft
Support website explains.
22h
on MSN
Microsoft brought back this feature to the new version of Outlook
Microsoft aims to revamp the new Outlook with a pair of Narrator features that make checking your emails easier.
ChannelNews Australia
2d
Microsoft To Soon End Support For Windows 11’s Mail, People and Calendar Apps
Microsoft
has confirmed that by the end of this year, it will stop support for Windows 11’s Mail,
Calendar
, and People ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results
Trending now
Tapped for health secretary
Charged over Capitol riot
Palm Springs OKs reparations
Trump meets with Milei
Flight avoids mountain
OH trans bathroom bill
Ben & Jerry's sues Unilever
World’s most polluting cities
Gender-affirming care ban
UK jets track RU aircraft
To run Interior Department
Laying off about 1K workers
18 states sue SEC, Gensler
Opposition leader convicted
New Jersey forest fire arrest
UFO reports spike
NYC gang war indictments
To host Oscars in 2025
Rapper pleads not guilty
Citigroup facing US probe
Leonid meteor shower
Alleged ISIS support charge
Bitcoin hacker sentenced
Moon volcanoes study
CDC: OD deaths down
Laken Riley murder trial
APEC Peru 2024
US finalizes $6.6B in funding
US retail sales climb
Sims replacing Sterling
Tiafoe fined $120,000
To play at Steinbrenner Field
Feedback