News
        
        Microsoft Pulls Plug on Outlook Web Apps for iOS and Android
        
        
        
			- By Kurt Mackie
 - March 08, 2018
 
		
        Microsoft's  Outlook Web App mobile  client e-mail applications for Android, iPad and iPhone devices will be phased out over the next few months, the company said this week.
The announcement used the old "Outlook Web App" term even though the currently used descriptor is "Outlook on the Web." This refers to browser-based e-mail client applications available to  Office 365 subscribers and to users of the on-premises Office Web Apps Server (now  called "Office Online Server"). 
Deadlines
In April, Microsoft plans to withdraw the Outlook on the Web  apps for Android from the Google Play store. It'll also withdraw the iPad and  iPhone Outlook on the Web apps from Apple's iTunes store in that month.
On May 15, Outlook on the Web (or Outlook Web App) mail  client applications for Android, iPad and iPhone mobile devices will stop  working, Microsoft's notice warned. On that date, end users still using those  apps will get prompted with a message suggesting that they download the Outlook  for Android or Outlook for iOS native apps. 
End users will get recurring messages in April telling them that  the Outlook on the Web apps won't work on May 15. However, if an organization  uses Exchange Server on-premises, then IT pros will have to tell those end  users that their Outlook on the Web apps are expiring. Microsoft explained that  point in this  "Microsoft OWA Mobile Apps" support document:
  If  your organization uses Exchange Server on-premises (that is, hosts its own  Exchange servers rather than using Office 365) and you're using the OWA mobile  app, you won't receive the in-app message. Your administrator should let you  know that the OWA mobile apps will stop working on May 15, 2018 and that you  can use Outlook for iOS or Outlook for Android instead.
Instead of using those retired Web apps, Microsoft wants mobile  device users to use the "native Outlook app for iOS and Android  devices." Setup instructions are linked at this  page.
Microsoft gave no reason why it was ending its Outlook on  the Web apps. It described the move as an effort to "streamline our mobile  portfolio." Microsoft's Outlook mobile client portfolio has been confusing  at best. A list of possible clients can be found here.   
According to a  Microsoft Tech Community explanation, the Outlook for Android and Outlook  for iOS applications are based on Microsoft's  acquisition of Acompli, and those reworked Acompli apps essentially became  the official mobile apps going forward. At one point, the Outlook for Android  and Outlook for iOS apps used Amazon Web Services (AWS) for caching, but that  architecture was replaced with native Exchange Online support. That native  support "means there is no mailbox data that is cached outside of Office 365,"  Microsoft explained in a  TechNet document.
Feature Support
Unfortunately, it seems that the dying Outlook on the Web  apps had greatest support for e-mail features. For instance, Outlook on the Web  apps have support for things like renaming folders, which the native apps can't  do, according to this  Microsoft comparison chart. On balance, the bulk of the feature support  seems to be mostly on the Outlook on the Web app side.
The "Microsoft OWA Mobile Apps" support document partially  addressed the question of loss of features support when moving to the native  clients. Here's how it characterized that change for end users:
  Many  features, including shared or delegate calendar access and the ability to view  the Global Address List, are now included in the Outlook apps. Other features  (like shared mailboxes) will be available by the end of 2018. In the meantime,  the Outlook web experience is available from your browser on your mobile device.
It's not clear what Microsoft means by the "Outlook web  experience." Microsoft's note perhaps suggests that there's another way to  access Outlook in a browser. Meanwhile, comments in Microsoft's announcement,  like "please stop deprecating functionality without providing an  alternative," seem to be falling on deaf ears.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.