Microsoft Outlook for Mac OS has a flat look, which looks pretty with the Mac operating systems. The entire application is monochromatic, offers lots of white and grey with the occasional blue accents, which has the close look of the Mac Operating systems.
Last month Microsoft that it plans to bring Google Calendar and Contact syncing to Outlook for macOS, and today the company is its test group ahead of the official feature release planned for later this year. These updates are currently available to our community, and we’ve been excited by the response we’ve seen. However, we still need some additional feedback before making these updates broadly available. To expand testing, Microsoft is launching a “worldwide preview” of the new Google Calendar and Contacts syncing feature for any Mac user to try.
Outlook for Mac Preview is available to and will work without an Office 365 subscription. Microsoft’s Insider Fast community, for comparison, is reserved for select paid Office 365 subscribers. Microsoft says the free Outlook for Mac Preview with the new Google Calendar and Contacts features will run through June 30, 2017. The company is especially looking for testers who do not regularly use Outlook for Mac and instead rely on Google apps and services to ensure Outlook’s experience is up to par.
Microsoft already supports extensive Gmail features including Calendar and Contacts syncing with.
Casio vl tone 1 emulator mac. Outlook for Mac is a disk space hog but the macOS has a way to recover some of that. Mac computers can have relatively small hard drives like 128GB or 265GB which Outlook 2016 for Mac can gobble up. Unfortunately, Outlook for Mac, even the latest Outlook 2016 doesn’t have some of the space saving options available to Office for Windows. In particular, the ability to only sync the most recent messages.
Outlook for Mac is ‘sync all’ software. The result can be many gigabytes used up on a relatively small drive. Before you buy a new Mac or get a third-party drive upgrade, check out a somewhat hidden feature in the macOS – HFS+ compression.
MacOS HFS+ compression Windows users have a ‘Compress contents’ options to shrink the disk space used by files. NTFS Compress works seamlessly in the background.
It’s easy to use and available on the Properties dialog for any file, folder or entire NTFS drive. It’s not used a lot on Windows computers now because hard drives have become a lot larger and cheaper. The compression doesn’t save as much disk space as it once did because many file formats are now already compressed (e.g. Docx, xlsx, pptx, jpg etc). MacOS has a similar feature, HFS+ compression which has been available since the Snow Leopard release. Note: macOS also has a feature called ‘Compress’ which is a different thing entirely.
Unfortunately, HFS+ compression isn’t easy to use. The Apple supplied method is terminal command lines! That’s a right PITA and really strange for the usually user friendly Mac.
If you want to try HFS+ compression from the command line – check out. We found a nifty and cheap tool to use HFS+ compression, but it’s disappeared. Outlook for Mac data folder location Outlook 2016 for Mac puts the data folders in the users Library folder ~/Library/Group Containers/UBF8T346G9.Office/Outlook/Outlook 15 Profiles/Main Profile Then drill down to /Data/ and three ‘Message’ folders: • Messages • Message Sources • Message Attachment Outlook 2011 for Mac is different. Data is stored in Documents/Microsoft User Data then in ‘Identities’.
What’s taking up Mac disk space? We used to look at the entire drive and see which folders took up the most space. Sure enough, Outlook is using 20GB. Unlike Outlook for Windows (which has a single enormous data file.PST or.OST), Outlook for Mac saves messages and attachments in many different files. That’s another reason why Outlook for Mac uses up so much disk space.
Now you’ve identified the Outlook for Mac data folders, you can compress them. HFS+ Compression with Outlook 2016 for Mac Our tests of HFS+ compression saved 9GB of disk space from 20GB of Outlook data – a whopping 47% improvement. Here’s the results of some folder HFS+ compression.
The three Outlook 2016 message folders get shrunk nicely by HFS+ compression. Messages was 4.6GB and now uses less than 1GB. Message Sources was 4.5GB and is now about 3GB.
The 10.5GB Message Attachments folder is now about 7GB. That was a welcome surprise since many of the attachments are already compress formats like.docx.pdf and.jpg The top three folders are non-Outlook examples for reference. The Video and Top Shots folders have video and JPG files which are already compressed, so the disk space saved is tiny. The Documents folder has a mix of many files types with about 10% disk spaced saved by HFS+ compression. Clusters We turned to Clusters which is an app which puts a friendly face on HFS+. We bought it in late September 2017 for a mere US$15.