Office 2016 starts to unify the Exchange experience on the desktop, but native apps do better on mobile clients. Microsoft is in the midst of reworking its Outlook clients and server software to truly support its mission to bring its Office communications tools everywhere: the Mail, Calendar, People (contacts), and Notes components in Outlook. (I did not include OneNote because it does not work through Exchange but through the still-unfinished OneDrive for Business.) In the meantime, Microsoft has a hodgepodge of clients whose capabilities vary widely, which can bedevil multiplatform organizations. It may take years for Microsoft to deliver fully on that universal promise, but Outlook 2016 is off to a good start, at least on the desktop. Outlook 2016 is now available for all major platforms, with two exceptions: Although available for local and personal Office 365 installation, Outlook 2016 (like the full Office 2016 suite) won’t be available for enterprise Office 365 installation until later this month. Native clients from Apple, Google, and Samsung also support many Outlook features via their Exchange connections, and for some organizations, a mix of Microsoft and non-Microsoft clients may make sense. To make sense of the universe of Exchange-compatible clients on the major operating systems, I’ve put together a table that shows the features where differences often remain. That way, you can see what client mix best supports the features you use, and which features are ones that will thwart a multiplatform policy based on the notion of equal citizenship. You may be surprised by how capable, for example, the Apple and Samsung clients are on their platforms. They also have better user interfaces than the Microsoft and Google clients, in my opinion. When you look at the capabilities of the Windows Universal “Outlook” apps that come with Windows 10, called simply Mail and Calendar, you’ll also see why any business Windows user really needs the full Outlook app over the free limited Universal apps. The tables below have three major sections: one for all the Outlook 2016 clients, one for the native Apple OS X and iOS clients, and one for native Android clients from Google and Samsung. You may need to scroll horizontally to see all the columns. And you may find it easier to work with an Excel spreadsheet directly, so I have provided a downloadable version of the complete table in Excel format as well. download What works where: Outlook vs. Outlook vs. native clients Compare which features work on which Outlook clients, and how they compare to the native clients for Apple and Android devices. Galen Gruman / InfoWorld Related content analysis With three zero-days, it’s a patch-now Patch Tuesday for May This is one of those months where it’s important to roll out Microsoft’s latest round of fixes as soon as you can. By Greg Lambert May 17, 2024 9 mins Microsoft Windows 10 Windows Security opinion Review: The M4 iPad Pro — an amazing AI PC Light, thin, and indiscreetly powerful, Apple's new iPad Pro will be seen as more than just a tablet once Apple introduces genAI in iPadOS. By Jonny Evans May 17, 2024 11 mins iPad Apple iOS news Citrix parent mulls selling ShareFile amid streamlining efforts The disinvestment of ShareFile is seen as a strategic move by Cloud Software Group to refocus on its core competencies. By Gyana Swain May 17, 2024 3 mins Citrix Systems Collaboration Software news Google brings Gemini AI to the classroom Google is making its Gemini AI assistant available for Workspace for Education customers beginning on May 23. By Matthew Finnegan May 17, 2024 4 mins Education Industry Generative AI Google Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe