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        Outlook Apps for Android and iOS Get Management Boost
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
- February 19, 2015
Just weeks after their release, Microsoft's Outlook apps for Android and iOS devices are getting new management capabilities. 
The new Outlook apps provide mail, contacts and calendar  access (though the version for Android is still at the "preview"  stage). Microsoft says it plans to update the apps "every few weeks," with this week's update being aimed at delivering security enhancements for end users, as well as some added controls for IT  departments managing Android and iOS devices.
New IT Controls
IT pros can now require passwords for using Outlook apps on  Android and iOS devices via Exchange ActiveSync. The enforcement mechanism consists  of compelling the end user to set up a personal identification number (PIN) to  get e-mail through Outlook. This enforcement process takes place at the device  level, rather than at the app level, to smooth over the user experience,  according to Microsoft's  announcement. 
Enforcement at the device level permits access via a single  PIN, whereas enforcement through the app level sometimes requires entering two  PINs to access e-mail, Microsoft explained, which can be "cumbersome."  A device-level PIN also better supports other features such as "native  device encryption, TouchID on iOS and Smart Lock on Android," according to  the announcement. 
Password enforcement works differently on Android devices  compared with iOS devices due to the controls made available by Google and  Apple, Microsoft's announcement explained. In essence, Apple's devices include  built-in encryption, while Android devices will just check if passwords are  properly set and will "encourage storage encryption." IT pros get  more control options with Android devices. They can set Office 365 and Exchange  policies on "password length and complexity requirements and the number of  allowable screen-lock attempts before wiping the phone," according to Microsoft.
Microsoft also sped up the app-level wipe capability with  the new Outlook app releases. IT pros can wipe out e-mail, contacts and  calendar files used for business purposes while not destroying personal apps  and data on an Android and iOS device, and that can now be done "within  seconds," Microsoft indicated. Such a wipe also gets rid of data stored in  a cloud service used with the Outlook apps.
The new Outlook apps now support the ability to synchronize  mail from other e-mail service providers that use the Internet Message Access  Protocol (IMAP), such as "AOL.com and Comcast.net." The Outlook apps use  IMAP's IDLE feature to get mailbox changes. However, if IDLE isn't supported by  the mail service, then "Outlook will sync every few minutes,"  Microsoft explained.
Microsoft's announcement indicated that the company is  planning to add more IT management and security features to its Outlook apps  "over the coming weeks and months." In particular, Microsoft plans to  add Intune support for Outlook apps, as well as the ability to move an Outlook service  running on Amazon Web Services to the Microsoft Azure service. 
Office 365 Document Security
In a  separate announcement, Microsoft also talked about some of the data  protection services it provides across platforms for its Office applications  supported by Office 365 services. For those persons wanting to receive encrypted  Office 365 messages on Android or iOS devices, Microsoft now has Office 365  Message Encryption viewer apps, which were released today at the Google Play  Store and the iOS App Store. 
The Office 365 Message Encryption service, part of the  company's Azure cloud service offerings, will get some enhancements in the  second quarter of this year. At that time, Microsoft plans to roll out the ability  to expire messages according to set time intervals. In addition, the company plans  to add a capability that will "revoke access from certain recipients once  the encrypted message is viewed." Lastly, Microsoft is planning to add a  button to its Outlook Web App that senders can use to encrypt a message. 
Microsoft's Information Rights Management (IRM) service, a document  protection scheme that Microsoft offers to help control the dispersal of corporate  information, has now been enabled for documents stored on OneDrive for Business,  Microsoft announced today. OneDrive for Business is Microsoft's cloud storage  service for organizations that's based on SharePoint Online technology. 
Microsoft is aiming to extend its IRM protection capabilities  to e-mail on "all platforms." A future IRM integration will be brought  to Office applications running across various operating system platforms.  Microsoft's announcement laid out the roadmap as follows:
  - Office apps for iPhone and iPad will start supporting IRM in summer of 2015.
- Office for Mac will support IRM in its first release in second half of CY2015.
- Office apps for Android will support IRM in second half of 2015
- IRM will be enabled out of the box in Universal Office apps and Outlook for Windows 10.
- We are also working hard to enable IRM in the newly released Outlook app for iOS and Android and more details will follow soon.
Outlook App Feature Updates
  This week's Outlook app releases for Android and iOS devices  also included a few feature enhancements for end users. It's now possible to specify  what happens with certain swipe gestures when organizing e-mail collections,  and users can also create and name their own folders for e-mail archive  purposes. They just have to make a few Settings changes to make that happen.
It's also now possible for iOS users to turn off the Outlook  app's default behavior of organizing e-mail threads into "conversation"  views. Instead, e-mails can just arrive as individual messages, if that's wanted.  Microsoft plans to add that capability to its Outlook app for Android devices  in a future release.
New features will be coming with later Outlook app releases.  For instance, Microsoft is planning to add support for "local syncing of  contacts." It also plans to expand language support. Lastly, it is planning  a "general availability" release its Outlook app for Android devices,  moving it out of the preview stage, although it's not clear when that will  occur.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.