Outlook.com Review


Recommended Posts

After years of using Gmail, I am deciding to switch to outlook .com as my primary email. Gmail is a good email provider, but its sluggish at times, it receives massive amounts of spam, its messy looking. Outlook seems safer, it has a cleaner interface, its very fast and responsive, it doesn't read emails to deliver ads. Outlook.com's interface is also very modern in contrast to gmail which seems like its stuck in 2005. There are perks of using outlook also like its interwoven into Windows 8.

 

Outlook

Pros:

Clean Interface

Faster

Responsive

Little Spam

Easy to use

Many good features

 

Cons

None so far.

 

Conclusion

I highly recommend outlook.com, if your sick of gmail and are looking for something fresher, safer and more reliable, switch to outlook. You can use either @live.com, @Hotmail.com or @outlook.com for your email address.

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1168443-outlookcom-review/
Share on other sites

What I love about outlook.com is that I can make email aliases and as many as I want of them for spam or other stuff.

With Gmail it's even simpler. Add as much dots in your email as you want, or put numbers after +. [email protected], [email protected] and [email protected] are just as valid as [email protected].

 

The fact that you get little spam is most likely because your email just doesn't appear on any lists yet. It'll increase over time.

 

You'll have to explain how it's safer and more reliable though. Safer is something I really doubt, for example since Microsoft uses TLS 1.0 instead of 1.1 or better on their websites, which is no longer really safe.

  • Like 2

With Gmail it's even simpler. Add as much dots in your email as you want, or put numbers after +. [email protected], [email protected] and [email protected] are just as valid as [email protected].

 

The fact that you get little spam is most likely because your email just doesn't appear on any lists yet. It'll increase over time.

 

You'll have to explain how it's safer and more reliable though. Safer is something I really doubt, for example since Microsoft uses TLS 1.0 instead of 1.1 or better on their websites, which is no longer really safe.

Yeah I like the dots method but it's not really a different mail address it still contains my original email address which I like to hide from certain people :P

Yeah I like the dots method but it's not really a different mail address it still contains my original email address which I like to hide from certain people :p

True, it depends on if you want to filter out spam or filter out people.

 

I still keep on using Gmail since it's pretty much the only free email service that has a proper native client on pretty much all platforms there are. Even my old Sony Ericsson featurephone (a super-cheap K320i) had push mail support with Gmail, natively. With Outlook you keep bumping into restrictions.

 

I also like Google's focus on security, personal security that is. I don't really mind automated scanning of my mails for advertising and stuff like that, but I really like how it's pretty much impossible for anyone to break into my Google Account. Microsoft has only been catching up in this area very recently.

True, it depends on if you want to filter out spam or filter out people.

 

I still keep on using Gmail since it's pretty much the only free email service that has a proper native client on pretty much all platforms there are. Even my old Sony Ericsson featurephone (a super-cheap K320i) had push mail support with Gmail, natively. With Outlook you keep bumping into restrictions.

 

I also like Google's focus on security, personal security that is. I don't really mind automated scanning of my mails for advertising and stuff like that, but I really like how it's pretty much impossible for anyone to break into my Google Account. Microsoft has only been catching up in this area very recently.

I thought old sony ericssons also supported exchange? Atleast I thought I remembered that on my old w710 :p

For all modern devices that support exchange you can just use m.hotmail.com as exchange server even for mail adresses like @outlook.com

although i do like outlook.com and have been a user of hotmail.com for a very long time, i have found that outlook.com is a lot slower than Gmail, the minimal UI obviously comes into affect, however when all you want to do is access your emails then speed of access is important.

 

On the same machine and the same internet connection it takes outlook.com a good 5 seconds after gmail.com has come up 

I thought old sony ericssons also supported exchange? Atleast I thought I remembered that on my old w710 :p

For all modern devices that support exchange you can just use m.hotmail.com as exchange server even for mail adresses like @outlook.com

Yeah, but not for email I think. When I used it with Google I used Exchange for contact and calendar sync and IMAP for push mail. It's surprising how advanced those cheap phones were, you had apps (Opera Mini, a FB app, ...), sync, GPS (on my G705 later), ...

 

I'm not a big fan of Exchange (and how it works with Hotmail/Outlook). 

Yeah, but not for email I think. When I used it with Google I used Exchange for contact and calendar sync and IMAP for push mail. It's surprising how advanced those cheap phones were, you had apps (Opera Mini, a FB app, ...), sync, GPS (on my G705 later), ...

 

I'm not a big fan of Exchange (and how it works with Hotmail/Outlook). 

Yeah Exchange isn't perfect but atleast better then pop3 which doesn't sync read and unread mails >.>

And I also had the G705 :D later I had even a 5mp sony ericsson and then a 8mp which was amazing and super luxurious for the time :P

Well POP3 is ancient. IMAP is pretty good but not all implementations are the same. Gmail's is a bit awkward at times because of their label system which doesn't directly transfer to folders (but it has other significant advantages).

 

(I went from the G705 to the Elm, also 5MP :P And then Arc, 8MP!)

  • 5 months later...

With Gmail it's even simpler. Add as much dots in your email as you want, or put numbers after +. [email protected], [email protected] and [email protected] are just as valid as [email protected].

 

The fact that you get little spam is most likely because your email just doesn't appear on any lists yet. It'll increase over time.

 

You'll have to explain how it's safer and more reliable though. Safer is something I really doubt, for example since Microsoft uses TLS 1.0 instead of 1.1 or better on their websites, which is no longer really safe.

With outlook.com, the + method works as well.

  • 2 months later...

Hate gmail especially now that they have added this annoying "someone logged into you account, was it you" warning every time i use a vpn or try to connect from my email client. So damn annoying, yes it is me get a goddamn idea.

 

<3 outlook, i am really mad i decided to go with gmail as my main provider but now i hate it so much and i have no choice but to continue using it because of all the sites and everytihng associated with my gmail email.

  • Like 1

Hate gmail especially now that they have added this annoying "someone logged into you account, was it you" warning every time i use a vpn or try to connect from my email client. So damn annoying, yes it is me get a goddamn idea.

 

<3 outlook, i am really mad i decided to go with gmail as my main provider but now i hate it so much and i have no choice but to continue using it because of all the sites and everytihng associated with my gmail email.

It's not going to magically know it's you. I do love both Microsoft and Gmail for supporting two factor authentication. It is nice knowing there is an additional layer of security on top of passwords. 

It's not going to magically know it's you. I do love both Microsoft and Gmail for supporting two factor authentication. It is nice knowing there is an additional layer of security on top of passwords.

Agreed, just yesterday MS alerted me that someone was trying to access my account. Thank goodness for two factor authentication.

The new inbox tabs of Gmail are absolutely fantastic, but what really kills Outlook.com for me is the lack of IMAP support. When they implement that, I'll start considering it.

You know, it's surprising. When they talked about inbox tabs, I thought "pfffft, I'll never use that..."

 

Then they break you in with some preset ones.

 

And then you realize... this is awesome.

 

I've made it clear that I'm not a fan of Google, but Gmail is something I feel they do very well with and is why I unfortunately can't make the dive away from their service. It's simple without robbing you of options. I also prefer the layout of Gmail over Outlook.com. I still use my Outlook account, but only for small work use.

  • 9 months later...
  • 4 months later...

The new inbox tabs of Gmail are absolutely fantastic, but what really kills Outlook.com for me is the lack of IMAP support. When they implement that, I'll start considering it.

In short, you don't use Outlook (or Mail included with Windows 8 or later) as a mail client.  (Both support EAS - which is Outlook.com's non-Web protocol.) Because I use Outlook 2016 (which supports IMAP and EAS) it's a great big non-issue.

 

By the by, what DO you use as a mail client?

Same here. I use outlook at work and its better than my age old home G mail. I haven't faced any problems till date with IMAP support so its fine. Cannot consider altering my gmail account since it has spread far and wide though. Cheers!

You can use Outlook with GMail - in fact, it's my preferred GMail client (and always has been, oddly) back to when Outlook didn't support IMAP.

 

If anything, Outlook 2010's "launch and leave" IMAP support further cemented Outlook's rep as my go-to e-mail client.

 

If only Yahoo Mail (in the US) supported IMAP4 (or POP3, for that matter) without fees....

  • Like 1

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Posts

    • VS Code 1.123 introduces massive upgrades for persistent AI developer workflows by Paul Hill Microsoft has just released Visual Studio Code 1.123 alongside its annual developer conference, Build 2026. This release, as always, has a heavy focus on advanced AI agent integration and making the built-in browser more robust. Notably, this update brings big sync changes that keep your AI agents persistent across sessions. With this update, VS Code now supports cross-machine syncing for chat histories, touched files, repository contexts, and related PRs via GitHub accounts, tying users even more into Microsoft’s developer ecosystem. This update also introduces the new /chronicle command that allows you to query past sessions using natural language, generate instant standup reports, and get personal productivity insights. Microsoft has also made some improvements to network-dependent operations, it explains: “When a terminal command that is run by a local agent requires access to domains that are not configured as allowed domains, the command is automatically retried inside the sandbox with unrestricted network access. After that, if it still fails, it falls back to unsandboxed execution. This allows network-dependent operations such as git fetch to finish, while keeping filesystem protections in place.” Microsoft has not stopped there; in this update, it also allows developers to drag, drop, and pin multiple agent sessions side-by-side for easy code comparisons in real-time. It also introduces the Research Agent, accessible via /research. This is a read-only, depth-optimized tool that gets data from the web, local codebase, and GitHub to give you a Markdown report on complex APIs or unfamiliar code. Now, let’s talk about the integrated browser and some security enhancements. VS Code 1.123 features enhanced screenshot capture tools that allow for targeted Area Screenshots and Full Page Screenshots to send layout context instantly to AI chat. The address bar has also been revamped, supporting favorite pages and tab management. Finally, on the security front, this update introduces a safety-first two-hour delay on third-party extension auto-updates to safeguard against compromised or buggy releases. This release is now available for Windows, Mac, and Linux. If you have VS Code, keep an eye out for the update availability notification. If you still don’t have VS Code, you can get it here.
    • I'm hoping with the Surface Pro 12, I can use either USB-C for my Xreal One Pro glasses. With my Surface Pro 11 OLED X Elite, I have to plug them into the top port. The bottom port will power it, but nothing shows on the screen. Maybe it's my setting. When I plug in the glasses, I have it output only to the glasses. So maybe I need to turn on both displays with it in the top port, then switch the glasses to the bottom port and set it to output only to the glasses. And then hopefully Windows remembers the settings for either the top port and bottom port (one of the awesome features of Windows where it remembers the exact configuration when plugging in external monitors.
    • Forgive my ignorance, but the only difference I see here is that a USB-A is now a USB-C, so there are two of them. For the modern age (and I'd argue since 2020), most products would now come with USB-C as an option, if not the default. Display, charging, devices, etc on TWO connectors, sometimes all combined! So having 2 of those powerful ports is great for something this size! Meanwhile my Surface Pro (5) has a single USB-A port which I cannot even get display out to, instead relying on some Surface Connect dock which I don't have. That is a poor experience, not to mention expensive and not compatible with other devices. Thank God USB-C is mainstream!
    • wow. that color finally comes to Surface Pro. was always a little jelly when a friend had the sandstone Surface Laptop. I wonder how different this dune is from the sandstone. I'll be getting the dune version. always thought black and platinum were a little boring. I'll still have access to my blue Surface Pro 11 as it'll be a hand-me-down.
    • Looks a very subjective aren't they!? I like its simple design. I love the way Apple designs their products with function over form, minimalization, and simplicity over cluttered complex designs. Many, not all, of their products follow this trend, and the device becomes a tool rather than dominating the space. I do not however like their OS. I have never bought a Apple product, and while I'd consider the Neo for my wife, I am hoping there are better alternatives out there when her failing MacBook Pro 2017 finally stops. Fischer-Price is famously plastic, garish, and poorly made. Basically you're describing the Window Laptops the Neo competes against! This is how product design should be, and what Apple have often followed in recent years: https://tenprinciples.design/
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      B2Proxy earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      MadMung0 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      jefred earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Apprentice
      JoeyNeo went up a rank
      Apprentice
    • Week One Done
      oliviaexpo earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      482
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      227
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      70
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      60
    5. 5
      Nick H.
      54
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!