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Outlook on the web (OWA) is a web app from Microsoft that lets users access their email, calendar, contacts, and tasks from any browser. It is included in Microsoft 365 and Exchange Server and Online, and has a history of development since 1995.
Learn about the development and evolution of Microsoft Exchange Server, a client–server email system that supports X.400 and X.500 directories. Find out the features and versions of Exchange Server 2003, the last one to support Windows 2000 Server.
Exchange ActiveSync (EAS) is a proprietary protocol for synchronizing email, contacts, calendar, tasks, and notes between a messaging server and a mobile device. Learn about the history, features, and usage of EAS across different platforms and services.
Learn how to use POP or IMAP to download or send emails from your AOL Mail account on a different email app. Find the server settings and instructions for common email apps like Outlook, Gmail, Samsung and more.
Learn how to create, edit, sort or delete filters in AOL Mail to automatically sort new emails to a folder or the trash. Filters can help you organize your inbox and avoid missing important messages.
Microsoft Outlook is a personal information manager software system from Microsoft, available as a part of the Microsoft 365 software suites. It offers email management, contact storage, calendar scheduling, and task tracking, and can function independently or as part of a larger Microsoft ecosystem.
Learn what the User-Agent header is and how it identifies the user agent responsible for making a given HTTP request. Find out the format, use, and examples of user agent strings for browsers and bots.
Outlook.com, formerly Hotmail, is a free personal email service by Microsoft that offers webmail, calendaring, contacts, and tasks. Learn about its origins, development, security issues, and competition with other webmail providers.