Outlook-We’re delivering a number of significant technical improvements to Outlook. With these new capabilities, IT admins can centrally create, manage and enforce policies for content authoring and document sharing-and end users will see policy tips or sharing restrictions when the apps detect a potential policy violation. Now we’re bringing these same classification and policy features to Word, Excel and PowerPoint. We’ll share more on the end-user enhancements planned for this release at a later date, but here’s a brief summary of some of the valuable updates for IT pros and developers.ĭata Loss Protection (DLP)-Over the last few years we’ve added DLP to Exchange, Outlook, OneDrive for Business and SharePoint. However, through the course of the preview, customers should expect to see new features delivered through monthly updates. To be clear, this early build doesn’t yet contain all the features we’re planning to ship in the final product. Now we’re ready to expand the program to our commercial Office 365 customers, an important milestone that gives IT pros and developers an opportunity to start testing the upcoming release. We’ve been in private preview with Office 2016 for several months. I’m pleased to announce the IT Pro and Developer Preview of Office 2016 for the Windows desktop. Today’s post was written by Kirk Koenigsbauer, corporate vice president for the Office 365 Client Apps and Services team.
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