In Outlook 2000, Word as the editor was usable, not perfect, but usable and by Outlook 2002, Word was acceptable as the email editor. Outlook 97 introduced Word as the email editor, but it was slow and awful. This lasted through Outlook 2000, and Outlook 2002 brought the two modes together again into one Outlook client. Confusion abounded because there were quite a few differences between the two versions. Outlook 97 was awful for non-Exchange users, which lead the developers to split Outlook into two versions - one which worked well with Exchange and OK with POP3, called "Corporate/Workgroup" (C/W) and a second version that did Internet mail, known as Internet Mail Only (IMO). The Outlook version numbers don't begin to tell the whole story. (That's why it was free and included with many books!) Outlook 98 was version 8.5 because Outlook 97 was so awful that they had to release an interim build ahead of the "next" Office release. Outlook 97 began at version 8.0 to match the Office version numbering system. The first release was Outlook 97, followed by Outlook 98, Outlook 2000, Outlook 2002 (aka Outlook XP), Outlook 2003, Outlook 2007, Outlook 2010. Microsoft Outlook is built upon the earlier Exchange clients and as a result, Outlook is the preferred client for Microsoft Exchange and also supports Internet (POP3 and IMAP) and other mail services. Windows Messaging | Outlook Express | More Information Microsoft Outlook | Exchange Server Client | Other Exchange Server Clients
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