The list
Microsoft Windows Mail
Windows Mail is the "new Outlook Express" for Vista and ships as part of the Windows Vista operating system. With that in mind, the simplest way to compare it to Outlook is to say it is less of the same.
Removing the Task and Calendar tabs does reduce clutter a little — which is handy if you don't need those features. By default the message reading pane is placed under the summary pane (whereas Outlook defaults to a side-by-side layout), but both layouts are available in each application. The interface has clearly labelled buttons for common tasks such as send and receive.
The comparison to Outlook express is perhaps being a bit blasé. Microsoft appears to have made an effort to separate this product from Outlook in terms of appearance as well as name. Certainly there was wisdom in visually distinguishing two products that differ markedly in depth of options.
The toolbar is different and matches more the styling of other Windows components such as My Computer and Windows Calendar. Windows Calendar? Yes, the various components found in Outlook can be accessed in the same manner as Mozilla Thunderbird and Sunbird, but through the use of two separate programs rather than the traditional integrated format of Outlook. Windows Calendar supports the publishing of calendars to the web and does include a To Do list.
Mail includes a place for LDAP contacts and supports RSS feeds. Filters can be applied to incoming mail, and mail boxes can be sorted on subject, sender, date etc, as per many other email clients.
This product should not be confused with Microsoft's Windows Live Mail, which Microsoft describes as having many of the features of Outlook Express and Windows Mail. In fact, it resembles an online email client enclosed in a dedicated web browser.
It includes the ability to access multiple accounts including Hotmail, Gmail and Yahoo standard POP3 or IMAP accounts, and RSS feeds are supported, but there is no calendar component. This product is directed at personal rather than business usage.
A client interface for any POP or IMAP service, businesses have the ability to apply restrictions to email traffic at their own mail servers. Being a Microsoft product it is also fully supported by the MAPI protocol used by Microsoft Exchange.
(Credit: Michael Palamountain/ZDNet.com.au)
(Credit: Michael Palamountain/ZDNet.com.au)
(Credit: Michael Palamountain/ZDNet.com.au)






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